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
First Speaker Announced: Niko Bowie to Kick Off “What To Do About the Courts” Reading Group
We're thrilled to announce the first speaker for What To Do About the Courts, the six-part reading group led by PPP and The Law and Political Economy Project. PPP board member Niko Bowie is the Louis D. Brandeis Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, where he teaches...
PPP in the News: North Carolina GOP Drops Crusade Against Jurist Who Questioned Racial Bias, for Now
PPP's own Billy Corriher writes for Slate that, "Justice Anita Earls, a Democrat and former civil rights lawyer, is no longer at risk of losing her seat on the North Carolina Supreme Court for speaking out about bias and discrimination at the highest level of the...
PPP Statement on the N.C. Judicial Standards Commission Ending its Sham Investigation Against Justice Anita Earls
People's Parity Project Statement on the N.C. Judicial Standards Commission Ending its Sham Investigation Against Justice Anita Earls Raleigh, NC—Today, the North Carolina Judicial Standards Commission ended its investigation into Justice Anita Earls, who faced...
PPP in the News: The Courts Will Never Save Us
Troy Brown writes for The [F]law that, "the Court [is] a shaky foundation on which to try to build a more just society." "But as progressives contemplate the future of the judiciary, it’s becoming increasingly clear that the left’s strategy has to go far beyond...
PPP in the News: Clinton, Obama Circuit Judges Shun Retirement as Election Looms
Tiana Headley writes for Bloomberg Law that, "Most Democratic-appointed appellate judges eligible for a form of semi-retirement are hanging onto their seats as the election year tests President Joe Biden’s goal of reshaping the federal circuit courts." "Several of the...
PPP in the News: The Legal Profession Still Won’t Hold Coup Sympathizers Accountable
PPP's own Molly Coleman writes for Balls & Strikes that, "Jones Day is back on its bullshit" as the firm fights for the right of insurrectionists to appear on the ballot. "And what happens when lawyers try to overturn elections without consequence? They do it...
PPP in the News: The Government Spent Decades Poisoning Marines at Camp Lejeune. Now It Wants Courts to Let It Off the Hook
PPP's own Steve Kennedy writes for Balls and Strikes that, "Military servicemembers and their families should be able to have juries hear their cases against a government that poisoned them. Yet even after Congress ensured that Camp Lejeune veterans have the right to...
PPP in the News: State Courts’ Growing Politicization May Get Worse In 2024
Jack Karp writes for Law 360 that "state judiciaries are becoming more overtly political, and important elections, rulings and ethics cases could exacerbate that partisanship in 2024": A similar dynamic is playing out in North Carolina, where Democratic Supreme Court...