Philp Alston moderated a panel featuring Dr. Alex Boraine, Justice Catherine Branson, Hina Jilani, and Justice Earl Johnson, Jr.. The panelists discussed access to justice for the poor in their respective countries (South Africa, Australia, Pakistan, and the United States). The panelists discussed how the current system fails to address the legal needs of the poor, and what progress is being made in that area
Access to justice efforts have been focused more on access than justice, due in part to the framing ...
I decided early in 2009, upon becoming Chief Judge and the steward of the justice system in New York...
If the ideal of justice is not pervasive in the United States, the issue of justice is-not so much i...
Philp Alston moderated a panel featuring Dr. Alex Boraine, Justice Catherine Branson, Hina Jilani, a...
Access to justice is a vital part of development. Without it, people who live in poverty can be left...
From the perspective of the legal system, the first decade of democracy has been characterised by th...
There is a saying in the United States: the justice one receives is the justice one can afford. All ...
This article reviews access to justice both theoretically and in practice. Second, it highlights som...
This Article examines the concrete efforts and programs of the Singapore judiciary to maintain and e...
This Article argues that the assumptions that underlie how we currently conceptualize equal access t...
Inaccessibility to justice is a major issue internationally, and in some countries access to justice...
MA Anthropology Research Report 2017Under apartheid access to justice was only available through pri...
This submission responds to six matters raised in the Draft Report: definition of access to justice;...
There are innumerable individual problems of access to civil justice. Civil justice, or its absence,...
This paper has concentrated on what the Judicial Conference of Australia (JCA) regards as the C...
Access to justice efforts have been focused more on access than justice, due in part to the framing ...
I decided early in 2009, upon becoming Chief Judge and the steward of the justice system in New York...
If the ideal of justice is not pervasive in the United States, the issue of justice is-not so much i...
Philp Alston moderated a panel featuring Dr. Alex Boraine, Justice Catherine Branson, Hina Jilani, a...
Access to justice is a vital part of development. Without it, people who live in poverty can be left...
From the perspective of the legal system, the first decade of democracy has been characterised by th...
There is a saying in the United States: the justice one receives is the justice one can afford. All ...
This article reviews access to justice both theoretically and in practice. Second, it highlights som...
This Article examines the concrete efforts and programs of the Singapore judiciary to maintain and e...
This Article argues that the assumptions that underlie how we currently conceptualize equal access t...
Inaccessibility to justice is a major issue internationally, and in some countries access to justice...
MA Anthropology Research Report 2017Under apartheid access to justice was only available through pri...
This submission responds to six matters raised in the Draft Report: definition of access to justice;...
There are innumerable individual problems of access to civil justice. Civil justice, or its absence,...
This paper has concentrated on what the Judicial Conference of Australia (JCA) regards as the C...
Access to justice efforts have been focused more on access than justice, due in part to the framing ...
I decided early in 2009, upon becoming Chief Judge and the steward of the justice system in New York...
If the ideal of justice is not pervasive in the United States, the issue of justice is-not so much i...