About Blog Nyaaya seeks to assist everyone to understand and deal
with everyday legal problems.
Help the public develop the confidence and capabilities they need to deal
with everyday legal problems.
The Canadian Forum on Civil Justice (CFCJ) has released several new publications from their Cost of Justice research project, which examines the cumulative social and economic costs associated
with everyday legal problems.
Many of our clients are vulnerable individuals who desperately need help
with everyday legal problems.
The mission: Develop technology tools that will help people develop the confidence and capabilities they need to deal
with everyday legal problems.
The Stream New guide for Self - Representing Litigants (and other people
with everyday legal problems)
Avvo's strength in the legal sector is the consumer market: everyday people
with everyday legal problems looking for legal help.
About Blog Nyaaya seeks to assist everyone to understand and deal
with everyday legal problems.
By empowering students to embrace human - centered design, employ empathy, and collaborate with fellow students from diverse backgrounds, the JDP serves as a catalyst for empowering the next generation of innovators to rethink the way that people
with an everyday legal problem understand and navigate the justice system.
Not exact matches
In BC, the
Legal Services Society partnered
with Hiil and Modria and recently launched MyLawBC, an interactive website to help people resolve
everyday problems.
The CFCJ survey also confirms that overall, there is a high prevalence of
everyday legal problems within Canadian society,
with... [more]
The CFCJ survey also confirms that overall, there is a high prevalence of
everyday legal problems within Canadian society,
with 47 % of all adult Canadians expected to experience one or more
legal problem within a three - year period.
Canadian studies indicate that some Canadians, particularly those
with fewer resources and marginalized groups, do not view the justice system as fair, accessible or reflective of them or their needs: Trevor C.W. Farrow, Ab Currie, Nicole Aylwin, Les Jacobs, David Northrup and Lisa Moore,
Everyday Legal Problems and the Cost of Justice in Canada: Overview Report [2016
Everyday Legal Problems Overview], 2016 Canadian Forum on Civil Justice, Toronto, Canada: online CFCJ http://www.cfcj-fcjc.org/sites/default/files/
Everyday%20
Legal%20
Problems%20and%20the%20Cost%20of%20Justice%20in%20Canada%20-%20Overview%20Report.pdf.
Canadian studies indicate that some Canadians, particularly those
with fewer resources and marginalized groups, do not view the justice system as fair, accessible or reflective of them or their needs: 2016
Everyday Legal Problems Overview.
One paper summarizes the following important findings of surveys of
everyday civil
legal problems in connection
with the unmet
legal needs of the poor and vulnerable:
TORONTO — Ontario has a justice gap
with more than 85 % of
everyday legal problems not getting resolved.
Yet despite the high number of people that experience
everyday legal problems, only a small percentage of people obtain
legal help in dealing
with them, and only a very small percentage use any part of the formal justice system to resolve them.