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The new international directory of legal aid / edited by Peter Soar.

EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Human Rights and Humanitarian Law - Book Archive 2000-2005 Available online

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Soar, Peter H. M., editor.
Series:
Nijhoff law specials ; Volume 51.
Nijhoff law specials ; Volume 51
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Legal aid--Directories.
Legal aid.
Legal services--Directories.
Legal services.
Physical Description:
1 online resource.
Place of Publication:
The Hague, The Netherlands ; London ; New York : Kluwer Law International, [2002]
Summary:
This book is a worldwide survey of legal aid containing more than seventy responses from ministries of justice, attorney generals, law societies, bar councils and individual lawyers to a detailed questionnaire. The results, set out here in summary form, are probably the most complete survey of its kind since the Lane and Hillyard edition of the Directory in 1985. The Editor of The New International Directory of Legal Aid , former legal aid solicitor Peter Soar, says: `In preparing this new edition I have learnt from previous users that the Directory is a valuable aid for Legal Aid Boards and law schools as well as individual lawyers.' In these pages you will find the ground work of legal aid systems in some of the most diverse legal jurisdictions from the Common Law countries of England and the Commonwealth to those which employ the approach of the Napoleonic Code. Here are systems adapted to the needs of the inhabitants of Caribbean islands, central European and Baltic states, emerging African peoples, the successors to ancient Indian empires, and countries of the Pacific Rim. The different forms of legal aid are of interest to practitioners and academics but the claims of the book go further than that. Just and fair societies depend on the maintenance of the rule of law. If the legal system, and in the last resort, the courts themselves are not within the reach of all citizens then talk of their rights is empty. If poor, weak, or powerless members of society are denied access to the courts because of lack of means, or if that access depends on the willingness of some lawyers to undertake cases pro bono , it is difficult to argue that in that state human rights are any more than forms rather than reality. If lawyers themselves exchange their independence for involvement in the very process of litigation (so-called `no win, no fee'), can it be said that freedom is not compromised? Here the reader can judge what in his or her opinion is the standing in these debates of each of the jurisdictions surveyed, with the help of editorial comments and the Editor's Introduction.
Contents:
Forward. Introduction. Questionnaire. A-Z of Jurisdictions.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
90-04-47879-5
OCLC:
1281957953
Publisher Number:
10.1163/9789004478794 DOI

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