Access to Justice
Editat de Ellie Palmer, Tom Cornford, Yseult Mariqueen Limba Engleză Paperback – 26 apr 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781509921140
ISBN-10: 1509921141
Pagini: 332
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.47 kg
Ediția:NIPPOD
Editura: BLOOMSBURY 3PL
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1509921141
Pagini: 332
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.47 kg
Ediția:NIPPOD
Editura: BLOOMSBURY 3PL
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Introduction
Tom Cornford, Audrey Guinchard, Yseult Marique and Ellie Palmer
Part I: Access to Justice: Theoretical, Legal and Policy Background
1. Access to Justice: The View from the Law Society
Andrew Caplen
2. The Meaning of Access to Justice
Tom Cornford
3. Principles of Access: Comparing Health and Legal Services
Albert Weale
4. Europe to the Rescue? EU Law, the ECHR and Legal Aid 3
Steve Peers
Part II: Pressure Points on the Justice System
5. Access to Justice in Administrative Law and Administrative Justice
Tom Mullen
6. Immigration and Access to Justice: A Critical Analysis of Recent Restrictions
Robert Thomas
7. The Impact of Austerity and Structural Reforms on the Accessibility of Tribunal Justice
Stewart Wright
8. Thirteen Years of Advice Delivery in Islington: A Case Study
Lorna Reid
9. Complexity, Housing and Access to Justice
Andrew Brookes and Caroline Hunter
10. Access to Justice in the Employment Tribunal: Private Disputes or Public Concerns?
Nicole Busby and Morag McDermont
11. Renegotiating Family Justice
Mavis Maclean CBE
12. Access to Justice for Young People: Beyond the Policies and Politics of Austerity
James Kenrick and Ellie Palmer
Part III: Alternative Approaches to Funding Legal Services
13. A Revolution in 'Lawyering'? Implications for Welfare Law of Alternative Business Structures
Frank H Stephen
14. CourtNav and Pro Bono in an Age of Austerity
Paul Yates
15. The French Approach to Access to Justice
Audrey Guinchard and Simon Wesley
16. How Scotland has Approached the Challenge of Austerity
Sarah O'Neill
Tom Cornford, Audrey Guinchard, Yseult Marique and Ellie Palmer
Part I: Access to Justice: Theoretical, Legal and Policy Background
1. Access to Justice: The View from the Law Society
Andrew Caplen
2. The Meaning of Access to Justice
Tom Cornford
3. Principles of Access: Comparing Health and Legal Services
Albert Weale
4. Europe to the Rescue? EU Law, the ECHR and Legal Aid 3
Steve Peers
Part II: Pressure Points on the Justice System
5. Access to Justice in Administrative Law and Administrative Justice
Tom Mullen
6. Immigration and Access to Justice: A Critical Analysis of Recent Restrictions
Robert Thomas
7. The Impact of Austerity and Structural Reforms on the Accessibility of Tribunal Justice
Stewart Wright
8. Thirteen Years of Advice Delivery in Islington: A Case Study
Lorna Reid
9. Complexity, Housing and Access to Justice
Andrew Brookes and Caroline Hunter
10. Access to Justice in the Employment Tribunal: Private Disputes or Public Concerns?
Nicole Busby and Morag McDermont
11. Renegotiating Family Justice
Mavis Maclean CBE
12. Access to Justice for Young People: Beyond the Policies and Politics of Austerity
James Kenrick and Ellie Palmer
Part III: Alternative Approaches to Funding Legal Services
13. A Revolution in 'Lawyering'? Implications for Welfare Law of Alternative Business Structures
Frank H Stephen
14. CourtNav and Pro Bono in an Age of Austerity
Paul Yates
15. The French Approach to Access to Justice
Audrey Guinchard and Simon Wesley
16. How Scotland has Approached the Challenge of Austerity
Sarah O'Neill
Recenzii
Running parallel to the steady erosion, at least in England and Wales, of what we had come, perhaps complacently, to regard as an entrenched human right, the seminar series on which this book is based looked carefully and realistically at both sides of the issue: the shrinking availability of public funds and the practical possibilities of doing more with less. The volume seeks in particular to distinguish between those inroads into access to justice which are unacceptable on any principled view and those which are either unavoidable or at least negotiable. Wherever possible it does so, in contrast sometimes to central government, from an ascertained evidence base.