
JP Boyd continues his series on improving family law with this post on a family services administrative agency.

JP Boyd continues his series on improving family law with this post on a family services administrative agency.

Omar Ha-Redeye has a post on how legal problems can affect health, and mentions new research from CFCJ.
For those interested in the broader debate on ABS, in which the issue of access to justice is figuring quite prominently, I would draw to your attention (I don’t think I have seen it explicitly referred to on this list yet) that the LSUC ABS Working Group has released a summary of the submissions it received in relation to its Discussion Paper on ABS. The summary is available here: <http://www.lsuc.on.ca/uploadedFiles/ABS-full-report.pdf> All of the submissions are available via links on this page: http://www.lsuc.on.ca/abs/
Attached is the first fact sheet coming out of the Cost of Justice project at the Canadian Forum on Civil Justice.
This fact sheet proceeds the release of three research papers that analyze the preliminary data from our national “Everyday Legal Problems and the Cost of Justice in Canada” survey. We expect to release these papers over the course of the next 2 months.
From 7 News in Australia, this article describes how the North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency expects to stop taking on clients due to funding uncertainty.

Here is a comment article in The Guardian criticizing recent Australian legal aid cuts for their effect on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities.

Richard Zorza’s access to justice blog notes that the ABA is looking for director for its Resource Center for Access to Justice Initiative.

This article in The Hamilton Spectator discusses what legal aid is and who qualifies.

Here is a longer article at Torontoist.com discussing some recent changes and challenges faced by some Toronto legal clinics.