
Injustice of the Peace
Mark Melton(Author)
Dalkey Archive Press
Will be published approx. on 15. April 2027
Book
Hardback
150 pages
978-1-64605-456-5 (ISBN)
Description
From the courtrooms of the wealthy and powerful to the living rooms of the impoverished and forgotten, Injustice of the Peace tells the story of poverty in America through the lens of a legal system that has become more of a tool of the wealthy than a bastion of truth and justice.
When attorney Mark Melton founded the Dallas Eviction Advocacy Center in 2020, he saw it as a way to give back to his community as a person who knew firsthand how devastating eviction and poverty could be. He didn't anticipate the fight for fair housing to be so hard-or for the work to transform his life. What began as a pro-bono project to ease the burdens of his evicted neighbors during the pandemic quickly grew into one of the largest and most effective tenant defense organizations in the United States. In Injustice of the Peace, Melton tells the story of that movement, painting an affecting picture of the housing crisis and the broken systems of power that continue to manufacture it.
Told through first-hand accounts of Dallas residents-from single mothers working tirelessly to make ends meet, to elderly couples living in units with no reliable electricity or hot water, to entire communities haunted by histories of redlining and illegal repossession-Injustice of the Peace explores the racial, economic, legal, and social strings in the web of injustice that make the rich richer and the poor, poorer. What emerges is a deeply moving, accessible roadmap to America's housing crisis and a rallying cry for a more compassionate, humane future.
When attorney Mark Melton founded the Dallas Eviction Advocacy Center in 2020, he saw it as a way to give back to his community as a person who knew firsthand how devastating eviction and poverty could be. He didn't anticipate the fight for fair housing to be so hard-or for the work to transform his life. What began as a pro-bono project to ease the burdens of his evicted neighbors during the pandemic quickly grew into one of the largest and most effective tenant defense organizations in the United States. In Injustice of the Peace, Melton tells the story of that movement, painting an affecting picture of the housing crisis and the broken systems of power that continue to manufacture it.
Told through first-hand accounts of Dallas residents-from single mothers working tirelessly to make ends meet, to elderly couples living in units with no reliable electricity or hot water, to entire communities haunted by histories of redlining and illegal repossession-Injustice of the Peace explores the racial, economic, legal, and social strings in the web of injustice that make the rich richer and the poor, poorer. What emerges is a deeply moving, accessible roadmap to America's housing crisis and a rallying cry for a more compassionate, humane future.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Deep Vellum Publishing
Product notice
With dust jacket
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
Not illustrated
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-64605-456-5 (9781646054565)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Mark Melton is a partner in one of the largest law firms in the United States where he helps clients buy and sell companies around the globe. During the pandemic, he founded the Dallas Eviction Advocacy Center, which defends thousands of tenants each year facing eviction and has revolutionized the way pro bono legal services are provided to the poor.