I've written a few posts
recently about access to justice and the current flaws in our system.
Not exact matches
Andrew Pilliar, a PhD student at UBC Law,
recently delivered a TEDx talk on «why you should care
about access to justice.»
Commission staff
recently completed a consultation with indigenous women
about the barriers they face when trying
to access justice through the federal commission.
Recently, a discussion
about access to justice solutions cropped up among lawyers on the platform and our executive producer, Laurence Colletti, decided it was worth recreating the conversation in podcast form.
With over a decade of fairly fundamental regulatory challenges brought
about by the
Access to Justice Act 1999, s. 58 Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 (Conditional Fee legislation) and more
recently LASPO (Jackson and DBAs), not
to mention the overhaul of the Solicitors Code of Conduct
to its present guise of the Handbook in October 2011, one would be forgiven for thinking that the solicitors profession is already sufficiently regulated without yet more intricate legislation.
About the Series Richard Zorza, one of the founders and leaders of the
access to justice (ATJ) movement, recently received the American Bar Association's 2014 Louis M. Brown Award for Legal Access» Lifetime Achievement Honor for decades of work on behalf of self - represented liti
access to justice (ATJ) movement,
recently received the American Bar Association's 2014 Louis M. Brown Award for Legal
Access» Lifetime Achievement Honor for decades of work on behalf of self - represented liti
Access» Lifetime Achievement Honor for decades of work on behalf of self - represented litigants.