The Georgia State University Center for Access to Justice has created an interactive map to show the availability or lack of legal services in different places.

The map clearly shows the access to justice gap—including those much-discussed six rural Georgia counties with no lawyers—and gives a clickable snapshot of the rest of the state as well.

“This map provides a data-driven picture of how the ability to access justice varies dramatically across the state and particularly between the metropolitan areas and more rural counties,” Lauren Sudeall Lucas, center director and associate professor of law, said in a news release.

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