The Law Foundation of Ontario used to provide grants to Ontario's law school libraries as part of its mandate to
promote access to legal information as part of advancing its vision for a truly accessible justice system.
It has grown to become a service to governments, legal professionals, NGOs, students, academics and members of the public and has been widely recognized as an example of excellence in
promoting access to legal information.
It provides a forum for the exchange of information and ideas among members, fosters cooperation among Canadian law libraries, and plays an active role in
promoting access to legal information for all Canadians.
Not exact matches
Justia's partner, the
Legal Information Institute, is designed
to promote open
access to law.
The Declaration on Free
Access to Law affirms: that public legal information from all countries and international institutions is part of «the common heritage of humanity;» that maximizing access to this information promotes justice and the rule of law; that public legal information is «digital common property» and should be accessible to all on a non-profit basis and free of charge; and that organizations (such as legal information institutes) have the right to publish public legal information and the government bodies that create or control that information should provide access to it so that it can be published by other pa
Access to Law affirms: that public
legal information from all countries and international institutions is part of «the common heritage of humanity;» that maximizing
access to this information promotes justice and the rule of law; that public legal information is «digital common property» and should be accessible to all on a non-profit basis and free of charge; and that organizations (such as legal information institutes) have the right to publish public legal information and the government bodies that create or control that information should provide access to it so that it can be published by other pa
access to this
information promotes justice and the rule of law; that public
legal information is «digital common property» and should be accessible
to all on a non-profit basis and free of charge; and that organizations (such as
legal information institutes) have the right
to publish public
legal information and the government bodies that create or control that
information should provide
access to it so that it can be published by other pa
access to it so that it can be published by other parties.
It will grant 20 UTS Law students the opportunity
to create intelligent web applications that
promote access to justice and make tailored
legal information more reachable.
The goal of the website is
to expand
access to justice by facilitating the sharing of
information and resources among
legal services advocates and by
promoting pro bono representation by the private bar.
The Statement, that
promotes the principles of open
access in legal scholarly publishing in Canada and free access to legal information in society, follows the Durham Statement on Open Access to Legal Scholarship adopted by the law libraries of major American universities in late
access in
legal scholarly publishing in Canada and free access to legal information in society, follows the Durham Statement on Open Access to Legal Scholarship adopted by the law libraries of major American universities in late
legal scholarly publishing in Canada and free
access to legal information in society, follows the Durham Statement on Open Access to Legal Scholarship adopted by the law libraries of major American universities in late
access to legal information in society, follows the Durham Statement on Open Access to Legal Scholarship adopted by the law libraries of major American universities in late
legal information in society, follows the Durham Statement on Open
Access to Legal Scholarship adopted by the law libraries of major American universities in late
Access to Legal Scholarship adopted by the law libraries of major American universities in late
Legal Scholarship adopted by the law libraries of major American universities in late 2008.
What's especially noteworthy about Free the Law, though, and what distinguishes it from other preservation initiatives, is that it provides for the preservation of historical
legal materials in connection with free, public
access to them, on the conviction that
access to legal information promotes access to justice.
The goals of the website are
to expand
access to justice by facilitating the sharing of
information and resources among
legal services advocates and by
promoting pro bono representation by the private bar.
It's Open
Access Week this week, an opportunity to highlight efforts to promote, facilitate and otherwise support access to cultural, scientific and legal inform
Access Week this week, an opportunity
to highlight efforts
to promote, facilitate and otherwise support
access to cultural, scientific and legal inform
access to cultural, scientific and
legal information.
Our organization exists
to promote a better understanding of the law for all and
to support
access to justice for those who for any reason, represent themselves in
legal matters by providing coaching, appropriate encouragement,
legal information, referrals or other resources
to those people
GOALI will
promote access to justice by removing the economic and technological barriers
to proprietary
legal information in developing economies around the world.
The purpose of GOALI is
to «provide free or very low cost online
access to legal information and academic research
to governments, universities and non-profit institutions in developing countries
to promote access to justice and the rule of law.»
Web 2.0 matters for the
legal profession, because it
promotes an
information environment in which lawyers can simplify
access to material of precedential value.
We seem
to lose the critical faculties pertaining
to information specialists, obsessed with «teaching»
legal research «according
to West», happy
to promote reliance on Lexis and Westlaw regardless that half our students will not have
access to them after graduation.
It's an idea that does a great job of supporting their primary goal
to «
promote Free
Access to Law and Open Justice in Africa» and it facilitates the development of other
Legal Information Institutes in Africa.