Vol. 37 No. 1, February 2010
Index
- Introduction: 2008 ABA section of litigation access to justice symposium.
- Access to justice: some historical comments.
- The need for a national civil justice survey of incidence and claiming behavior.
- Connecting self-representation to civil Gideon: what existing data reveal about when counsel is most needed.
- Lawyering in juvenile court: lessons from a civil Gideon experiment.
- Access to justice in a world of expanding social capability.
- Higher demand, lower supply? A comparative assessment of the legal resource landscape for ordinary Americans.
- Equality before the law and the social contract: when will the United States finally guarantee its people the equality before the law the social contract demands?
- Examining the real demand for legal services.
- Nothing for something? Denying legal assistance to those compelled to participate in ADR proceedings.
- The challenges of calculating the benefits of providing access to legal services.
- If we don't get civil Gideon: trying to make the best of the civil-justice market.
- Access to justice in a world without lawyers: evidence from Texas bodily injury claims.
- Lawyerless dispute resolution: rethinking a paradigm.
- Representation in mediation: what we know from empirical research.
- Between access to counsel and access to justice: a psychological perspective.