Not exact matches
is the first - ever
effort to capture comparable
data on legal needs and public access to civil
justice on a global scale, representing the voices of more than 46,000 people in 45 countries.
It puts
data about the needs of citizens, transparency about the quality of
justice delivered, the
efforts of high quality civil society organisations at the core.
No small feat but certainly recent culture - change
efforts from the University of Victoria's Access to
Justice Centre for Excellence (UVicACE) and Ontario's Open
Data Directive are encouraging.
However, on Oct. 6, 2015, the Court of
Justice of the European Union declared the Safe Harbor to be invalid, prompting frantic
efforts to develop a replacement framework for transatlantic
data transfers that would ensure that any transfer of personal information of EU citizens to U.S. companies would meet equivalent
data protection standards to those standards that exist in the EU.
They observe that current reform
efforts are being seriously handicapped by a paucity of hard, empirical
data about Canada's civil
justice system.
``... there have been powerful last - ditch
efforts to get Clause 76 removed from the Criminal
Justice and Immigration Bill... There has been widespread support for the government's decision to strengthen the law, and — if
data protection is to be taken seriously — it is vital that the government and other parties should stand firm against any possible amendments.