Let’s talk torts. Not those delicious cakes (but let’s reserve some time to talk about those later). These torts are the justice kind, the legal kind, the kind that mean average citizens can sue automakers for faulty products, or a doctor for malpractice.

The American Museum of Tort Law wants to get people talking about and understanding the ins and outs of this often complicated, often maligned area of the law concerning consumer safety and personal injury.

Housed in a former bank, the museum was founded in 2015 by noted consumer advocate and frequent presidential candidate Ralph Nader, in his hometown of Winsted, Connecticut. Nader wanted a place to teach people about the importance of consumer protections, an issue he’s well-versed in.

In 1965, Nader published the book Unsafe at Any Speed, an exposé on the lack of safety measures in place in American car manufacturing. The book served as a catalyst for passing the 1966 National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act, and spurred the passage of seatbelt laws in 49 states. Since then, Nader has spent much of his career advocating for consumer protections. In an interview during the museum’s planning phases, Nader explained that “Tort law, the law of personal injury, was a major step on the march to justice.”

Although the museum features an exhibit dedicated to Nader’s Unsafe at Any Speed victories, it is not a collection all about his work. Instead, the focus is mainly on landmark tort law cases like exploding Pintos, tobacco lawsuits, and perhaps the most well-known tort case, Liebeck vs. McDonald’s in 1992, the case involving hot coffee that brought tort law into the public conversation.

The museum also sees its mission as being a place to educate the public and dispel myths they may be upholding about this part of the law. The mission is helped along with signage illustrated by Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Matt Wuerker, and Nader hopes that one day the museum can host reenactments of some of the famous tort law cases.