New Books in Public Policy

Jamila Michener and Mallory E. Sorelle, "Uncivil Democracy: How Access to Justice Shapes Political Power" (Princeton UP, 2026)

22 snips
Feb 25, 2026
Mallory E. Sorelle, a Duke public policy scholar of consumer financial protection, and Jamila Michener, a Cornell professor focused on racial justice and welfare, discuss access to civil justice. They explore who lacks help in eviction, debt, and housing cases. They compare U.S. systems, show how courts shape political standing, and highlight tenant organizing as a route to collective power.
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ANECDOTE

Queens Legal Services Internship Sparked The Project

  • Jamila Michener recounts her internship at Queens Legal Services where demand far exceeded the number of attorneys available.
  • She watched clients with eviction, benefits, and debt issues routinely go without representation and realized systemic causes mattered more than case-by-case fixes.
INSIGHT

Justice Gap Is A Massive Representation Shortfall

  • Mallory E. Sorelle defines the justice gap as the large disconnect between civil legal need and available representation, especially for low-income litigants.
  • About 250 million Americans face civil legal problems yearly and most low-income people go to court unrepresented, unlike criminal defendants who have a right to counsel.
INSIGHT

Access To Civil Justice Is Deeply Racialized

  • Jamila Michener explains the justice gap is racialized because structural inequalities expose Black and Latina people to precarious housing and they lack resources to hire private attorneys.
  • She also highlights direct discrimination by landlords that compounds the unequal legal exposure and outcomes.
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