It is not
really about access to justice, as I previously supposed.
Not exact matches
Sam, since today's conversation is
about access to justice and potentially advocating for a civil right
to counsel, we thought it would be interesting
to kind of check the pulse of our listeners and see both how they feel
about the concept of creating a civil right
to counsel, and also
about kind of what their commitment
to access to justice and pro bono work is, and so we created a
really simple two question survey in the show notes for today's podcast episodes.
This concept of
access to justice recognizes that factors outside the law can make even «good» law inaccessible, and that a problem that has been framed as legal, may really be about other conditions affecting a person that are outside of the law: Patricia Hughes, Advancing Access to Justice through Generic Solutions: the risk of perpetuating exclusion, 31 Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice 1 (2013)[Hughes, Access to Justice and Generic Solutions], online http://ojs.uwindsor.ca/ojs/leddy/index.php/WYAJ/article/view
access to justice recognizes that factors outside the law can make even «good» law inaccessible, and that a problem that has been framed as legal, may really be about other conditions affecting a person that are outside of the law: Patricia Hughes, Advancing Access to Justice through Generic Solutions: the risk of perpetuating exclusion, 31 Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice 1 (2013)[Hughes, Access to Justice and Generic Solutions], online http://ojs.uwindsor.ca/ojs/leddy/index.php/WYAJ/article/vie
justice recognizes that factors outside the law can make even «good» law inaccessible, and that a problem that has been framed as legal, may
really be
about other conditions affecting a person that are outside of the law: Patricia Hughes, Advancing
Access to Justice through Generic Solutions: the risk of perpetuating exclusion, 31 Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice 1 (2013)[Hughes, Access to Justice and Generic Solutions], online http://ojs.uwindsor.ca/ojs/leddy/index.php/WYAJ/article/view
Access to Justice through Generic Solutions: the risk of perpetuating exclusion, 31 Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice 1 (2013)[Hughes, Access to Justice and Generic Solutions], online http://ojs.uwindsor.ca/ojs/leddy/index.php/WYAJ/article/vie
Justice through Generic Solutions: the risk of perpetuating exclusion, 31 Windsor Yearbook of
Access to Justice 1 (2013)[Hughes, Access to Justice and Generic Solutions], online http://ojs.uwindsor.ca/ojs/leddy/index.php/WYAJ/article/view
Access to Justice 1 (2013)[Hughes, Access to Justice and Generic Solutions], online http://ojs.uwindsor.ca/ojs/leddy/index.php/WYAJ/article/vie
Justice 1 (2013)[Hughes,
Access to Justice and Generic Solutions], online http://ojs.uwindsor.ca/ojs/leddy/index.php/WYAJ/article/view
Access to Justice and Generic Solutions], online http://ojs.uwindsor.ca/ojs/leddy/index.php/WYAJ/article/vie
Justice and Generic Solutions], online http://ojs.uwindsor.ca/ojs/leddy/index.php/WYAJ/article/view/4308.
Without malice, too many of them (there are several heartwarming exceptions) see ABS as a way of being seen
to be doing «something»
about access to justice but without having
to tamper with the real barrier and, well, if the low - cost small firm solicitors are badly harmed, well, they didn't
really mean
to do it and it wasn't their fault, and, well, that's progress isn't it?
John - Paul Boyd, executive director of the CRILF and one of the report's authors, explains, «It's
really only in the last five or six years that efforts have been undertaken
to collect actual empirical information
about the courts and other dispute resolution processes,» adding that, «part of the whole
access to justice inquiry has
to involve the accessibility of different dispute resolution processes and their relative costs.»
(No legal research database is cheap, but pooling resources and making
Really Good Value legal research databases available
to everyone supports «
access to justice» goals:
to educate students, voters, and anyone else with an abiding lifelong intellectual curiosity
about law, lawmaking, judicial process, legal rights, government, and politics.)
I guess that part of me is like I
really don't think that you have
to think
about access to justice as sort of nonprofit charity work.