Can blockchain help the billions of people who need the law for protecting
their basic justice needs?
Not exact matches
In the extreme, such defenses hold that ethics, love and
justice are luxuries in which we indulge only after our
basic needs have been met.
It has insisted on equality between women and men, and on
justice for women regarding access to
basic needs, the means of sustaining a livelihood and the decision - making processes that organize and regulate the common life.
The Apostle's Creed presents us with the Trinity (that is not all it presents, but just an example), which gives us the
basic idea that the Gospel is about community, which then
needs to be expanded through the teaching in the church to explain social
justice, kingdom living, responsibility towards earth - care, etc..
In the context of our social situation, revelation means the promise of
justice for and liberation of the oppressed and the poor, of all whose
basic needs have not been met and whose human dignity has not been recognized.
He also said Nigeria
needed three
basic things he listed as
justice, obeisance to the rule of law and accountability to move forward.
These encompass
basic security for all — including the protection of women against sexual violence...... that means a military that is effective and respects human rights...... it means a police force that people run towards not away from...... and it means a
justice system that is fair, dependable and accessible to all who
need it.
Yet it does share what most expect from community schooling: restorative
justice; «whole - child» and culturally relevant, interdisciplinary teaching; family engagement; expanded learning opportunities; and on - campus wraparound supports that address
basic student and community
needs, including physical and mental health, financial literacy, housing assistance and legal support.
For this reason, the United States and other developed nations, along with perhaps a few developing nations, have an immediate duty to begin to reduce their emissions to their fair share of safe global emissions and this obligation is compelled by
basic justice, not a
need for leadership.
Whether your clients
need basic representation, hard - earned
justice or simply some peace of mind, you're often in the position to make a real impact in their lives.
Access to
justice is an incredibly difficult problem not only for those who are indigent or without resources but increasingly for those in the middle class who can't afford legal services in order to meet their
basic needs or find them difficult to access.
I'm a staff attorney with the Public
Justice Center and coordinator of the National Coalition for Civil Right to Counsel, which works to establish a right to counsel in civil cases that involve
basic human
needs, such as shelter, safety, sustenance, health, and child custody.
Most of these
justice problems were connected with the most
basic social and livelihood
needs: safety, land, family, and housing.
The Wisconsin Access to
Justice Commission has released its Legal Services for Abuse Victims Proposal urging the Wisconsin Legislature to ensure that abuse victims in Wisconsin have access to the
basic legal services they
need to protect themselves and to begin rebuilding their lives.
Reading about AI on a daily basis is frustrating when there are so many unmet
needs of lawyers and we haven't even scratched the surface of helping people who don't have
basic access to
justice and who can't get representation because of exorbitant legal fees that amount to a person's paycheck.
Equal
Justice Works provides you with an overview of some
basic steps you'll
need to follow when developing an on - campus law school event.
In our 2012 Trend Report on
Basic Justice Care for Everyone we highlighted five innovation directions as most
needed and most promising.
We secure
basic needs, protect and preserve legal rights, provide equal access to
justice and seek fairness and dignity for our clients.
As many as 100 million Americans are living with civil
justice problems, many of which are rooted in a lack of what the ABA terms «
basic human
needs», i.e. Food, Shelter, Safety and Health.
We
need to reform youth
justice systems, ensuring that the abuse of children's
basic needs and rights ends and re-focus on returning children to their families with the support to enable them to thrive, achieve and never return to the system.»
Aboriginal families
need reassurances that people's
basic human rights are being respected in juvenile
justice centres in the Northern Territory, New South Wales and other States and Territories.
But it is unacceptable to suggest that the provision of such
basic services and «practicality» outweigh the demands of social
justice or constitute a total response to the
needs of those forcibly removed.