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Justice for All: Ontario's Civil Access to Justice SystemPalmer, Jordan 15 December 2011 (has links)
This paper argues for increased access to civil justice in Ontario for citizens who cannot privately afford it (“needy citizens,” defined as those unable to engage in meaningful civil legal action due to financial inability). Access to justice is defined as access to trained legal representation as well as access to knowledge about Ontario civil law. The paper first articulates the theoretical underpinnings necessitating access to justice for all citizens. The paper then explores 5 common areas of Ontarian civil law (tort, residential, family, small business, and standard contract law) regarding access to civil justice within these regimes, and discusses 3 potential ways to remedy Ontario’s civil access to justice gap. These reforms are increasing government funding, an increase in activity by the legal profession of Ontario, and finally limited deregulation of Ontario’s law licensing process. The first two reforms are rejected, while the third is recommended.
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Justice for All: Ontario's Civil Access to Justice SystemPalmer, Jordan 15 December 2011 (has links)
This paper argues for increased access to civil justice in Ontario for citizens who cannot privately afford it (“needy citizens,” defined as those unable to engage in meaningful civil legal action due to financial inability). Access to justice is defined as access to trained legal representation as well as access to knowledge about Ontario civil law. The paper first articulates the theoretical underpinnings necessitating access to justice for all citizens. The paper then explores 5 common areas of Ontarian civil law (tort, residential, family, small business, and standard contract law) regarding access to civil justice within these regimes, and discusses 3 potential ways to remedy Ontario’s civil access to justice gap. These reforms are increasing government funding, an increase in activity by the legal profession of Ontario, and finally limited deregulation of Ontario’s law licensing process. The first two reforms are rejected, while the third is recommended.
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Access to Justice for the Masses? A Critical Analysis of Class Actions in OntarioKalajdzic, Jasminka 12 February 2010 (has links)
Judges and lawyers have embraced class proceedings as fulfilling an access to justice objective. In the more than fifteen years since the introduction of class proceedings legislation in Ontario, however, few have sought to evaluate whether or to what extent class actions have improved access to justice. The author begins to fill that void by first exploring various meanings of access to justice, and then examining in detail the initiation and settlement of class actions, and the controversial issue of counsel fees, using both doctrinal analysis and empirical data representing the class action practices of more than 75 plaintiff-side lawyers. She concludes that there are several aspects of class action practice and jurisprudence that fall short of advancing access to justice to its fullest extent, and calls for further socio-legal analysis to measure the impact, and evaluate the success, of class actions.
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Access to Justice and the Institutional Limits of Independent CourtsRankin, Micah 19 December 2011 (has links)
Canadian citizens’ inability to access courts has been a subject of controversy for decades. Despite widespread evidence that Canada’s legal aid system is faltering, governments continue to be unwilling to commit the resources necessary to remedy the problem. In this thesis, the author argues that people’s inability to access courts and obtain legal representation not only has implications for their rights and interests, but may also undermine judicial independence. Judicial independence, the author claims, is best understood as a variable bundle of rights, guarantees and powers conferred on courts and judges that preserves and enhances their abilities to adjudicate impartially, maintain a constitutional distribution of powers and uphold the rule of law. Since people’s inability to access courts can impair the judiciary’s ability to preserve these values, judicial independence is undermined. The author claims that it is possible to correct problems of inaccessibility by appointing state-funded counsel in appropriate circumstances.
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Access to Justice and the Institutional Limits of Independent CourtsRankin, Micah 19 December 2011 (has links)
Canadian citizens’ inability to access courts has been a subject of controversy for decades. Despite widespread evidence that Canada’s legal aid system is faltering, governments continue to be unwilling to commit the resources necessary to remedy the problem. In this thesis, the author argues that people’s inability to access courts and obtain legal representation not only has implications for their rights and interests, but may also undermine judicial independence. Judicial independence, the author claims, is best understood as a variable bundle of rights, guarantees and powers conferred on courts and judges that preserves and enhances their abilities to adjudicate impartially, maintain a constitutional distribution of powers and uphold the rule of law. Since people’s inability to access courts can impair the judiciary’s ability to preserve these values, judicial independence is undermined. The author claims that it is possible to correct problems of inaccessibility by appointing state-funded counsel in appropriate circumstances.
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Access to Justice for the Masses? A Critical Analysis of Class Actions in OntarioKalajdzic, Jasminka 12 February 2010 (has links)
Judges and lawyers have embraced class proceedings as fulfilling an access to justice objective. In the more than fifteen years since the introduction of class proceedings legislation in Ontario, however, few have sought to evaluate whether or to what extent class actions have improved access to justice. The author begins to fill that void by first exploring various meanings of access to justice, and then examining in detail the initiation and settlement of class actions, and the controversial issue of counsel fees, using both doctrinal analysis and empirical data representing the class action practices of more than 75 plaintiff-side lawyers. She concludes that there are several aspects of class action practice and jurisprudence that fall short of advancing access to justice to its fullest extent, and calls for further socio-legal analysis to measure the impact, and evaluate the success, of class actions.
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Immunity of International Organizationsand the Right of Access to Justice for IndividualsLindén, Johan January 2018 (has links)
International Organizations are a growing force in the global arena. While themandate and influence of the UN has increased over the last decades, the existinglegal regime regarding privileges and immunities remain the same as they were atthe founding of the organization. This has led to mass tort claims towards the UN,stemming from damages caused by the organizations. These damages often consistof human rights violations, something the organization is generally regarded as aprotector of, rather than violator.As individuals seek to obtain reparations and remedies for the damages inflictedupon them, they are generally obstructed by the claim for immunity by theinternational organization. This constitutes a conflict of competing interests thatthe domestic courts must address and solve. This conflict is central to my thesis,as I will discover how this issue has been tackled by the national as well asinternational courts, and which consequences the current legal practice has for theindividuals. The thesis concludes with a discussion on what needs to be done inorder to bridge the current accountability gap created by the immunity ofinternational organizations.
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Access to justice for victims of sexual violence in refugee campsEberechi, Oghenerioborue Esther January 2018 (has links)
This study investigates the problem of access to justice for female victims of sexual violence
(SV) in refugee camps, using South Africa, Tanzania and Uganda in a multiple case study. The
main argument of this study is that female refugees in refugee camps, are not adequately pro-
tected by those responsible to safeguard them against sexual violence and the myriad of perpe-
trators of such sexual violations may never be apprehended, prosecuted, or convicted. Thus,
refugees who are victims of sexual violence in refugee camps do not even have the opportunity
to testify against their assailant.
On the order hand, the current UN Refugee Convention 1951 and its Protocol 1967 have no
clauses that protect female refugees against sexual violations. Moreover, victims do not have
access to justice in the host states, despite the provision of article 16 of the UN Refugee Con-
vention 1951, which provides free access to courts in all contracting states. Article 16 of the
UN Refugee Convention 1951 further proposes that refugees should be accorded the same
treatment like the citizens of host states in this respect.
The study reveals that sexual violence perpetrated against citizens of contracting states are
prosecuted in courts and victims have the opportunity in domestic courts to testify against the
assailants. Whereas, refugees who are victims of SV in the states of study are not treated like
the citizens who suffered the similar violation as prescribed by article 16 of UN convention of
1951. Since the cases of SV against refugees in the territory are hardly prosecuted, they do not
have the opportunity to testify against their assailant. / Therefore, this study recommends that states should be compelled to address the offence of
sexual violence against refugees in camps, as part of their international obligation as signatories
to the refugee convention. Through, a thorough investigation and prosecution of SV cases per-
petrated against these victims in their territories. So that victims of sexual violence in their territories can also have the opportunity to testify against their assailants like citizens who suf-
fer SV in the contracting states. However, if a State is not a party to the convention, that state
should be held responsible through the invocation of complicity to crime and customary inter-
national law. This is because the general norm in domestic courts is that, states handle the
prosecution of crime and the enforcement of the rights of their citizenry.
The study in addition, recommends an international legal framework in support of the current
international refugee mechanism that offers victims of sexual violations in refugee camps, legal
protection, and access to justice. The proposed international refugee instrument provides for
the enforcement of the rights of refugees who are victims of sexual violence, and remedy and
reparations that could mitigate the effects of such violence and encourage those charged with
their care to give both physical and legal protection to refugees, in camps, in their territories.
In addition, the study also suggests a one stop facility in refugee camps for handling the cases
of sexual violence against these victims, thus facilitating access to justice.
In addition, the researcher also suggests that states should assume a victim - oriented approach
in dealing with sexual violations in their territory. This is because, the current practice of the
domestic laws of states, is that victims of crime are used as prosecution witnesses, since crime
is against the State and a challenge of the rule of law. Consequently, victims do not have the
needed locus standi to access the courts as an injured party to a suit.
This can be achieved through the inclusion of a locus standi clause in their various criminal
procedure acts, so that victims will have the requisite access to court, become parties to the
litigation, as co-prosecutor of their offenders. This can be done, as a paradigm shift from the
current practice of the criminal proceedings, so that while the state prosecutor represents the
interest of the public and that of the rule of law, the victim will represent themselves and will
be given a fair hearing in oreder to assert their rights against their assailant. In this process,
victims can also enjoy the services of legal aid as maintained by article 16 of the 1951 UN
Refugee Convention. / Thesis (LLD)--University of Pretoria, 2018. / Public Law / LLD / Unrestricted
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Clinical legal education and access to justice in Ghana and CanadaFrimpong, Antwi 19 November 2021 (has links)
Law clinics have had a late start in Ghana, compared with similar initiatives in Canada. Although there have been consistent calls for the establishment of law clinics at various faculties of law across the country, development on the ground has been slow. Unlike Canada, no law school at present in Ghana has a law clinic that engages students in actual client representation. However, a comprehensive plan is now being introduced to provide legal aid and advice to the poor, and the Ghana Legal Aid Commission is taking steps to institute law clinics across the country’s faculties of law. Nevertheless, it is yet to be seen how this will be achieved. Drawing on the Canadian experience, this thesis examines the effectiveness of the law clinic method as an innovation that could be used to advance access to justice in Ghana. In so doing, a comparative legal analysis is conducted of approaches to the clinic method in Ghana and Canada, to identify ideal practices that could support the development of clinical initiatives in these countries. / Graduate
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Är tiden mogen för ett generellt prövningstillstånd? : En jämförelse av prövningstillståndets funktion i svensk och norsk straffprocessrätt. / A comparison of the function of leave to appeal in Swedish and Norwegian criminal procedure law.Steen, Albin January 2023 (has links)
No description available.
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