unSILOed with Greg LaBlanc

538. Bankruptcy, Inequality, and the Quest for Fairness feat. Melissa B. Jacoby

May 9, 2025
Melissa B. Jacoby, a Law Professor at UNC Chapel Hill and author of 'Unjust Debts', explores the complexities of the U.S. bankruptcy system. She discusses how specialized courts affect both personal and corporate bankruptcies, often entrenching existing inequalities. The conversation highlights disparities faced by low-income communities, the influence of the consumer credit industry, and the ethical concerns surrounding how wealthy families navigate bankruptcy. Greg and Melissa also examine the long-lasting impacts of these laws on justice and fairness.
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INSIGHT

Bankruptcy Reinforces Inequality

  • Bankruptcy law often piles on to pre-existing social inequities, especially affecting low-income communities of color.
  • Certain fines and fees that disproportionately burden these communities are rarely dischargeable, perpetuating cycles of hardship.
INSIGHT

Civil Rights Claims Are Marginalized

  • In municipal bankruptcies, civil rights claimants often receive minimal financial recovery and lose important legal rights.
  • The bankruptcy system converts complex wrongs into purely monetary claims, marginalizing the voices of harmed residents.
INSIGHT

Bankruptcy Narrows Legal Remedies

  • Bankruptcy prioritizes monetary value maximization, which can overshadow other legal objectives like accountability and information discovery.
  • The civil litigation process provides procedural benefits lost in bankruptcy, where settlements and judgments are truncated and enforced on all parties.
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