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

Feb 25, 2026
Mallory E. Sorelle, a public policy scholar focused on consumer finance and civil justice, and Jamila Michener, a government and public policy expert on Medicaid and inequality, discuss how civil legal problems like eviction and debt disproportionately affect marginalized communities. They explore racial and gendered dynamics, housing’s ties to health and benefits, comparative court practices, and how collective organizing can reshape access to justice and political power.
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ANECDOTE

Queens Legal Services Internship Revelation

  • Jamila Michener recounts interning at Queens Legal Services and seeing overwhelming demand for civil legal help outstrip staff capacity.
  • That experience convinced her lawyers could help individuals but couldn't address structural sources of eviction and housing precarity.
INSIGHT

Scale Of The Civil Justice Crisis

  • About 250 million Americans face at least one civil legal problem yearly and low-income people disproportionately show up in court without counsel.
  • Mallory Sorelle notes 75–80% of low-income Americans face such problems and most lack civil representation.
INSIGHT

How The Justice Gap Is Racialized

  • Access to civil justice is deeply racialized because poverty, housing precarity, and direct discrimination concentrate legal need among Black and Latino communities.
  • Jamila Michener ties higher eviction risk and lower wealth to who ends up in court and without attorneys.
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