The Winkler Institute blog has a post on justicefundr.ca.
Tag innovation
The Power of Bilingualism in the Legal Profession – Event Recap
The CFCJ has a recap of their recent event on the power of bilingualism.
Towards the Law of Legal Services
Andrew M Perlman suggests that access to justice in the US could be improved by re-imagining lawyer regulation.
Family Justice 3.0: a Settlement-Oriented, Lawyer-Facilitated Hybrid Approach
JP Boyd explores a possible future family justice model.
Transactional Legal Services, Triage, and Access to Justice
Access to Justice Advocate – Janet Mosher
Recent reports have underscored the importance of innovation and imagination to the pursuit of access to justice. At the Canadian Forum on Civil Justice, we understand that such efforts come down to people – to advocates. In an effort to spotlight the diverse range of individuals working across the access to justice landscape, we are pleased to present the Access to Justice Advocates blog series. Each month we will profile someone who brings a unique perspective and makes a valuable contribution to the issue of access to justice. Do you know an access to justice advocate? Let us know at communications@cfcj-fcjc.org.
The Canadian Forum on Civil Justice had the wonderful opportunity to meet Professor Mosher at Osgoode Hall Law School to discuss her work in access to justice. As a researcher and teacher, Professor Mosher spoke to us about conceptualizations of access to justice that stimulate her work, as well as the ways in which the intersection between research and frontline advocacy can play a unique role on the access to justice landscape. Her conceptualization of access to justice redirects access to justice advocacy away from courts and towards broader understandings of justice, power and inequality.
The full length version of the interview can be found here.
Washington State Moves Around UPL, Using Legal Technicians to Help Close the Justice Gap
From the US, there is an article in the ABA Journal on Washington state’s move to use “legal technicians” to help solve the “justice gap”, and two response pieces (#1 and #2) in Above the Law.
Map of Design-Driven Innovation Team
At Open Law Lab, Margaret Hagan maps a design-driven innovation team.
Wigging Out About Access to Justice
Canadian Lawyer has this piece on the launch of the second year of Flip Your Wig for Justice.
Technology-Assisted and Remote Evidence Presentation: A Practice Resource for BC Lawyers
The British Columbia Law Institute resource on technology-assisted and remote evidence presentation has just been posted to the Social Science Research Network.