Our Legal System is Rigged, &
Working People Pay the Price
Conservative and corporate interests have spent decades building a legal system that works for the wealthy and the powerful, not the people. It’s going to take deep, hard organizing work—a true movement dedicated to real justice, within and outside of our legal system—in order to build a better future. Will you join us?
About Us
People’s Parity Project is a movement of attorneys and law students organizing for a democratized legal system which values people over profits, builds the power of working people, and opposes subordination of anyform.
Together, we are dismantling a profession that upholds corporate power and building a legal system that is a force for justice and equity.
Our work focuses on building power for working people in the civil legal system through organizing, policy innovation, political education, and solidarity.
COMMUNITY
Bringing together lawyers and law students from around the country to unrig the law.
ORGANIZING
Doing the organizing and strategic short- and long-term advocacy needed to build a legal system that works for the people.
POWER
Building the power of the people at all levels of our democracy.
Upcoming Events
People’s Parity Project 2025 Convening
There has never been a more important time for pro-people, pro-democracy lawyers and law students to get organized. Maintaining the rule of law over the next three years and building […]
The Latest
PPP in the News: Lamont Nominates 22 To Superior Court Bench
Christine Stuart writes for CT News Junkie that, "Gov. Ned Lamont nominated 13 women and nine men as judges of the Superior Court Friday, a move aimed at ensuring diversity and expertise within the state judiciary." "Steve Kennedy, of the People’s Parity Project, said...
PPP in the News: Today’s Supreme Court is a threat to democracy — but activists plan to fight back
Paul Rosenberg writes for Salon that, "While the electoral backlash against Dobbs has been heartening, that's essentially a reaction to the most alarming and personally invasive Supreme Court decision, not a proactive effort to dismantle the source of the threat....
PPP in the News: Conn. Judges’ Backgrounds Affect Housing Cases: Study
Christine DeRosa writes for Law360 that, "Connecticut renters are more likely to face harsher judgments in housing proceedings before a judge with a corporate or prosecutorial background, who make up many of those on Connecticut's bench, according to a recent report."...
PPP in the News: Maura Healey Is Not Taking Judicial Ethics Seriously
PPP's own Molly Coleman writes for Balls & Strikes about Governor Maura Healey's decision to nominate her former romantic partner to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court: "Filling the judiciary with corporate attorneys and prosecutors has been done before. So...
Video: State Court Judges, Why They Matter, & Why You Should Be One
https://youtu.be/qqg929F21nw Law students and junior attorneys, this is the event for you! This virtual event is aimed at law students and early career attorneys who may be interested in learning more about state court judges, their role in our judiciary system, and...
PPP in the News: Report: CT judges’ professional backgrounds impact eviction rates
Ginny Monk writes for the Connecticut Mirror that, “Renters are more likely to be evicted if their housing court case goes before former corporate attorneys or prosecutors, who have a disproportionate presence in Connecticut state courts, according to a new report."...
PPP on a Podcast: How to Fight Back
In part four of 5-4's series on the Federalist Society, PPP's Executive Director Molly Coleman spoke about where the legal left has gone wrong in the past, and PPP's current work to challenge the corporate capture of the legal system. "On the left, we've spent a lot...
Impact of Judges Professional Backgrounds on Eviction Outcomes
Today, the People’s Parity Project released a report assessing the impact of judges' professional backgrounds on outcomes in eviction cases, finding statistically significant differences in average renter outcomes depending on judges' legal experience. Additionally,...