Praise for Unjust Debts:
"Unjust Debts is an important book. Written to welcome all readers into the world of bankruptcy, the book chronicles the evolution of one of the most important legal institutions in our market-based democracy."
-Harvard Law Review
"[Unjust Debts] goes a long way towards demystifying the web of complexity in personal and business bankruptcy."
—TLS
"In this compelling book Jacoby . . . shows how the bankruptcy code favours fake people, also known as corporations, over real people, especially relatively disadvantaged ones. . . . This is a highly disturbing account."
—Financial Times
"Jacoby's assured prose brings extraordinary clarity to an intentionally opaque and labyrinthine system. It’s an eye-opening look at the laws that undergird American inequality."
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Unjust Debts synthesizes three decades of research into the system’s frustrating contradictions, helpfully summarizes the crux of the issue as bankruptcy’s ‘structural bias in favor of artificial persons’—i.e., corporations, nonprofits, and constructed entities explicitly designed to shield rich and powerful owners from the consequences of their misdeeds."
—The American Prospect
"An exposéeacute; of the racial, class, and corporate biases in the U.S. bankruptcy system. . . . [Unjust Debts] is deserving of wide readership."
—Kirkus Reviews
"Unjust Debts explains the detail, texture and political economy of U.S. bankruptcy law in a highly readable form, and illustrates how they matter.”
—ProMarket
"Melissa Jacoby’s Unjust Debts takes on the gross inequality that victims face every day in mass tort cases. If we can’t grasp the magnitude of the problem, we’ll never be able to fix it. The American bankruptcy system is fundamentally broken and every policymaker in America should be reading this book."
—Ryan Hampton, addiction recovery advocate and bestselling author of American Fix and Unsettled
"What is the foundation upon which inequality in America is built? We have come to understand so much of that hidden architecture in recent years—and now, in Unjust Debts, Melissa Jacoby brilliantly unearths one of the largest, and least-understood building blocks."
—Michael Eric Dyson, Vanderbilt University, and New York Times bestselling author of Tears We Cannot Stop
"A serious subject made accessible through great storytelling: Unjust Debts by Melissa Jacoby is a must-read that brings bankruptcy law to life. A companion to The Whiteness of Wealth and The Color of Law, Jacoby shows how a color-blind statute operates in a world where bankruptcy filers bring their racial identities into bankruptcy court. Unjust Debts also demonstrates how corporations are winners even in court and provides a path to reform."
—Dorothy A. Brown, Georgetown University, and bestselling author of The Whiteness of Wealth
"A constitutional grant of second chances to overburdened people has transformed into a corporate escape hatch for shocking acts of misconduct, and Melissa Jacoby painstakingly documents that transformation. The fight to