The U.S. Department of Justice established the Access to Justice Initiative (ATJ) in March 2010 to address the access-to-justice crisis in the criminal and civil justice system. ATJ’s mission is to help the justice system efficiently deliver outcomes that are fair and accessible to all, irrespective of wealth and status. The Initiative’s staff works within the Department of Justice, across federal agencies, and with state, local, and tribal justice system stakeholders to increase access to counsel and legal assistance and to improve the justice delivery systems that serve people who are unable to afford lawyers.
ATJ is guided by three principles:
- Promoting Accessibility — eliminating barriers that prevent people from understanding and exercising their rights.
- Ensuring Fairness — delivering fair and just outcomes for all parties, including those facing financial and other disadvantages.
- Increasing Efficiency — delivering fair and just outcomes effectively, without waste or duplication.
To translate these principles into action, ATJ pursues strategies to leverage and better allocate justice resources, and works to:
- Advance new statutory, policy, and practice changes that support development of quality indigent defense and civil legal aid delivery systems at the state and federal level;
- Promote less lawyer-intensive and court-intensive solutions to legal problems; and
- Expand research on innovative strategies to close the gap between the need for, and the availability of, quality legal assistance.
Access to Justice Accomplishments
Thursday, May 2, 2013
Speech
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Speech
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Speech
Monday, March 18, 2013
Speech
Friday, March 15, 2013
Speech

April 16th, 2013
March 26th, 2013
March 21st, 2013
March 4th, 2013
February 12th, 2013
