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    a2j

    Explore "a2j" with insightful episodes like "Episode 68 | People-Centred Approach to Justice", "Episode 67 | Defining Access to Justice", "Episode 66 | Access to Justice Collaboration Across Canada", "Episode 63 | Trust and Dignity: What Do Citizens Want and Need in a Modern Justice System?" and "S4E3 - Access Free Saskatchewan Legal Resources" from podcasts like ""CIAJ In All Fairness - ICAJ En toute justice", "CIAJ In All Fairness - ICAJ En toute justice", "CIAJ In All Fairness - ICAJ En toute justice", "CIAJ In All Fairness - ICAJ En toute justice" and "Legal Skies - a podcast by the Law Society of Saskatchewan"" and more!

    Episodes (23)

    Episode 68 | People-Centred Approach to Justice

    Episode 68 | People-Centred Approach to Justice

    In this episode, host Daniel Escott is joined by Janet McIntyre, former Director of Justice Canada's Access to Justice Secretariat, for a discussion on the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goal 16, the role of the Secretariat domestically and internationally, and the gradual shift to a people-centred approach to justice.

    Speakers, documentation and more details on CIAJ's website

    Episode 67 | Defining Access to Justice

    Episode 67 | Defining Access to Justice

    In this episode, host Daniel Escott is joined by Trevor C.W. Farrow, a renowned access to justice researcher and incoming Dean of Osgoode Hall Law School, for a discussion on the pre-, during, and post-pandemic views of traditional access to justice. Dean Farrow provides a wealth of information on the problems that arise from a lack of access to justice, and discusses what meaningful access to justice looks like in the modern, post-pandemic period.

    Speakers, documentation and more details on CIAJ's website

    Episode 66 | Access to Justice Collaboration Across Canada

    Episode 66 | Access to Justice Collaboration Across Canada

    In this episode, host Daniel J. Escott explores the transformative landscape of access to justice in Canada in the company of his guests, esteemed legal experts Mark Benton, K.C. and Brea Lowenberger. Together, they discuss the impact of the Action Committee on Access to Justice in Civil and Family Matters at both national and local levels and explore how collaborative efforts between stakeholders can help improve access to justice across Canada.

    Speakers, documentation and more details on CIAJ's website

    Episode 63 | Trust and Dignity: What Do Citizens Want and Need in a Modern Justice System?

    Episode 63 | Trust and Dignity: What Do Citizens Want and Need in a Modern Justice System?

    According to a Justice Canada Survey in 2021, only 20% of Canadians are confident that the criminal justice system is fair to all people. What can we do to improve this situation? In this excerpt from CIAJ's 2022 Conference on dignity, CIAJ Lawyer Nathan Afilalo welcomes Rheanne Scott (Director, Justice and Community Safety, PwC Canada) for a special interactive session on what citizens want and need in a modern justice system.

    Speakers, documentation and more details on CIAJ's website

    S4E3 - Access Free Saskatchewan Legal Resources

    S4E3 - Access Free Saskatchewan Legal Resources

    Continuing professional development (CPD) content is an important research source for the practice of law. More than 800 documents focused on Saskatchewan law are now available on CanLii. Learn more about what's available on Canlii from our guests Sarah Sutherland, President and CEO of Canlii, and Alan Kilpatrick, Co-Director of Legal Resources at the Law Society of Saskatchewan.

    S4E1 Limited Scope Legal Services

    S4E1 Limited Scope Legal Services

    Welcome to Season 4! In this episode we discuss limited scope or unbundled legal services – what it is, why it's an affordable option and where to find a lawyer. Our guests are Tiffany Paulsen, Q.C., Bencher of the Law Society of Saskatchewan and partner at Robertson Stromberg LLP; and Dayna Cornwall, Project Manager for the National Self-Represented Litigants Project

    Episode 37 | With the Best of Intentions: Are Courts and Tribunals Really Providing Accessible Service to People With Disabilities?

    Episode 37 | With the Best of Intentions: Are Courts and Tribunals Really Providing Accessible Service to People With Disabilities?

    Are courts and tribunals really providing accessible service to people with disabilities? Michael Gottheil, Chief of the Commission and Tribunals of the Alberta Human Rights Commission, and Michael McNeely, Family Lawyer at Rogerson Law Group and first deaf-blind lawyer to graduate from Osgoode Hall Law School at York University, are seeking to answer this question in the third and last episode of our series on disability. Along the way, they discuss the reality in the justice system for people with disabilities, how courts and tribunals still struggle to provide accessible service to them, what challenges they are faced with on a day-to-day basis and how they can work and evolve in the sector of Law.

    Speakers, documentation and more details on CIAJ's website

    Episode 35 | Disability Inclusion: Access to Administrative Justice, Post-Secondary Education and Community Activism

    Episode 35 | Disability Inclusion: Access to Administrative Justice, Post-Secondary Education and Community Activism

    In this episode, Laverne Jacobs, a professor at the University of Windsor Faculty of Law and a person with physical disabilities, interviews Michael McNeely, who is the first deaf-blind lawyer to graduate from Osgoode Hall Law School at York University. They share thoughts on access to administrative justice for people with disabilities, challenges faced by members of the disability community becoming legal professionals and working as legal professionals, post-secondary education, and community activism.

    Speakers, documentation and more details on CIAJ's website

    Episode 34 | Barriers to Access to Administrative Justice for People with Disabilities

    Episode 34 | Barriers to Access to Administrative Justice for People with Disabilities

    In this episode, Professor Emeritus Philip Bryden meets with human rights advocate and accessibility consultant Michael McNeely to discuss barriers to access to administrative justice for people with disabilities. Together, they explore the obstacles that Mr. McNeely himself may encounter while practising law, and how the justice system could adapt to better meet the needs of his clients.

    Speakers, documentation and more details on CIAJ's website

    Trailer (English)

    Trailer (English)

    Rechtsgespräch – the podcast about innovation in the legal market and access to justice. From Berlin, Germany. With guests from Germany and all over the globe: www.rechtsgespraech-podcast.de.

     

    I am Cord Brügmann, host of this podcast. I am a lawyer and historian based in Berlin, curious about the rule of law, the legal market, and its regulation. And I am fascinated by people who are committed to innovation and access to justice. As an observer of and an actor in the legal market, I advise institutions and private companies, mainly on digitalization and regulation. And I write and speak about those topics.

    S3E4 Artificial Intelligence and Legal Information

    S3E4 Artificial Intelligence and Legal Information

    In the latest episode of Legal Skies, we speak to guests Alan Kilpatrick, Co-Director of Legal Resources at the Law Society of Saskatchewan, and Sarah Sutherland, Director of Programs and Projects at CanLII, about artificial intelligence (AI) and legal information.  They discuss the new AI classification system to help find resources easier and more efficient. Click here for more information. 

    Episode 27 | Institutions and A2J: From Barriers to Open Doors

    Episode 27 | Institutions and A2J: From Barriers to Open Doors

    In this episode, Athanasios Hadjis (Senior Legal Counsel, Administrative Tribunals Support Service of Canada) welcomes Professor Patricia M. Barkaskas (Instructor & Academic Director, Indigenous Community Legal Clinic, Peter A. Allard School of Law, University of British Columbia) who presents some conclusions of CIAJ's 2021 National Roundtable on Administrative Law entitled "All the Voices We Don't Hear."

    Episode 26 | Testimony of a Human Rights Advocate With Lived Experience of Disability

    Episode 26 | Testimony of a Human Rights Advocate With Lived Experience of Disability

    In this episode, Professor Philip Bryden, TransCanada Chair in Administrative and Regulatory Law at the University of Alberta Faculty of Law, is interviewing lawyer, human rights advocate, and accessibility consultant Michael McNeely, on his own experience with the justice system as a deaf-blind person.

    S3E2 Law Librarians and their Role in Access to Justice

    S3E2 Law Librarians and their Role in Access to Justice

    We discuss the important role information professionals (i.e. law librarians) play in the justice system and how they are helping expand public access to legal information. Our guests are Alan Kilpatrick, Co-Director of Legal Resources at the Law Society of Saskatchewan, Shaunna Mireau, Past-President of the Canadian Association of Law Libraries, and Kim Nayyer, Associate Dean of the Cornell Law School and President of the Canadian Association of Law Libraries. 

    Folge 15: Frauenrechte und Zugang zum Recht in Nepal, grüne Rechtspolitik und Zukunft der Anwaltschaft

    Folge 15: Frauenrechte und Zugang zum Recht in Nepal, grüne Rechtspolitik und Zukunft der Anwaltschaft

    In der fünfzehnten Folge des Rechtsgespräch-Podcasts spreche ich mit Sarmila Shrestha. Sie ist Rechtsanwältin in Kathmandu (Nepal) und hat über strategische Prozessführung beeindruckende Rechtsänderungen erwirkt und Frauenrechte gestärkt. Mein zweiter Gast: Katja Keul, grüne Rechtspolitikerin im Bundestag. Mit ihr spreche ich über grüne Rechtspolitik, die Rolle der Justizministerien als Anwälte der Justiz und über engagierte Anwältinnen und Anwälte, die Zugang zum Recht gewähren. Mein dritter Gesprächspartner: Karl-Peter Winters, ehemaliger Hauptgeschäftsführer des Deutschen Anwaltvereins, der 1990 ein Buch über die Zukunft der Anwaltschaft geschrieben hat. Ich frage: Welche Ihrer Prognosen sind eingetreten und wo haben Sie sich geirrt?

     

    Mein Lesetipp: Bernhard Klose, Justiz als Wirtschaftsfaktor

     

    ***Werbung***

    Sponsor des Rechtsgespräch-Podcasts ist Juris.

    juris – Das Rechtsportal bietet als führender Anbieter digitaler Rechtsinformationen umfassenden Zugriff auf juristische Fachliteratur, Gesetze und aktuelle Entscheidungen. Mit juris arbeiten Sie stets aktuell, rechtssicher und effizient. Jetzt informieren und gratis testen unter https:/www.juris.de/jportal/nav/startseite/startseite.jsp?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=podcast_juris. 

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    00:00:00 Begrüßung

    00:02:16 Werbung

    00:02:47 Sarmila Shresta: How do women get justice in Nepal?

    00:28:00 Katja Keul: Zusätzliche Zugänge zum Recht

         White House, Fact Sheet „Access to Legal Representation and the Courts”: https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/05/18/fact-sheet-president-biden-to-sign-presidential-memorandum-to-expand-access-to-legal-representation-and-the-courts/ 

    00:46:34 Karl-Peter Winters: Die Zukunft der Anwaltschaft

         Karl-Peter Winters, Der Rechtsanwaltsmarkt: https://www.otto-schmidt.de/der-rechtsanwaltsmarkt-9783504189501

    01:07:31 Lesetipp: Bernhard Klose, Justiz als Wirtschaftsfaktor

    01:11:17 Werbung

    01:11:48 Vorschau: Worthington, Reiss-Andersen, Luczak, Voß

    Rechtsgespräche mit Edith Kindermann und Matthias Kilian

    Rechtsgespräche mit Edith Kindermann und Matthias Kilian

    In der sechsten Folge des Rechtsgespräch-Podcasts spreche ich mit Edith Kindermann, der Präsidentin des Deutschen Anwaltvereins. Unsere Themen: Allgemeinanwält*innen, juristische Versorgungszentren und gute Interessenvertretung. Mit Matthias Kilian unterhalte ich mich über empirische Forschung und über den Zugang zum Recht, über den die Rechtspolitik in vielen Ländern mehr weiß als wir. Weil dort Unmet-Legal-Needs-Studien helfen, die Wirklichkeit besser zu verstehen.

     

    Mein Lesetipp: Frank Remmertz, Legal-Tech-Strategien für Rechtsanwälte.

     

     ***Werbung***

    Sponsor des Rechtsgespräch-Podcasts ist Juris.

    juris – Das Rechtsportal bietet als führender Anbieter digitaler Rechtsinformationen umfassenden Zugriff auf juristische Fachliteratur, Gesetze und aktuelle Entscheidungen. Mit juris arbeiten Sie stets aktuell, rechtssicher und effizient. Jetzt informieren und gratis testen unter https:/www.juris.de/jportal/nav/startseite/startseite.jsp?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=podcast_juris. 

    ***Werbung***

     

    00:00:00 Begrüßung

    00:00:59 Werbung

    00:01:31 Edith Kindermann: Interessenvertretung und Rechtsstaat

         Der Deutsche Anwaltverein: www.anwaltverein.de

        Informationen zum von der Pariser Kammer unterstützten Rechtsberatungsprojekt für sozial benachteiligte Menschen: https://www.barreausolidarite.org/nos-actions/bus-solidarite.html 

         DAV-Hauptgeschäftsführerin Sylvia Ruge zu juristischen Versorgungszentren: https://www.soldan.de/insights/praxisnetze-koennen-der-anwaltschaft-den-weg-in-die-digitalisierung-erleichtert/

    00:19:03 Matthias Kilian: Emiprie im Recht

         Laufende Projekte des Soldan-Instituts: https://soldaninstitut.de/laufende-projekte/

         Soldan-Institut, Forschungsergebnisse im Anwaltsblatt: https://anwaltsblatt.anwaltverein.de/de/autor/prof-dr-matthias-kilian

         Rezension der kanadischen Studie „The Justice Crisis“, über volkswirtschaftliche Schäden des fehlenden Zugangs zum Recht: http://www.slaw.ca/2020/09/03/thursday-thinkpiece-the-justice-crisis-the-cost-and-value-of-accessing-law/

         Rechtsgespräch mit Crisipin Passmore zu Reformen in England & Wales: https://rechtsgespraech.libsyn.com/folge-2-anwaltsregulierung-in-england-wales-hans-litten-und-losfuerlesbos-0

    00:41:11 Lesetipp: Remmertz, Legal-Tech-Strategien

         Kanzleipflicht, gesetzliche Grundlagen: https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/brao/__27.html; https://www.brak.de/w/files/02_fuer_anwaelte/berufsrecht/bora_stand_01.01.2020.pdf

    00:46:15 Werbung

    00:46:52 Vorschau: Joyce Raby, Daniel Halmer

    Rechtsgespräche mit Paul Nemitz und Nankunda Katangaza

    Rechtsgespräche mit Paul Nemitz und Nankunda Katangaza

    In der ersten Folge des Rechtsgespräch-Podcasts unterhalte ich mich mit Paul Nemitz, Hauptberater in der EU-Kommission und Autor des viel diskutierten Buchs "Prinzip Mensch. Macht, Freiheit und Demokratie im Zeitalter der Künstlichen Intelligenz (www.prinzipmensch.eu). Wir sprechen über KI und wie man sie fördern und einhegen kann. 

     

    Außerdem führe ich ein Rechtsgespräch mit Nankunda Katangaza aus London, die The African Law & Tech Network gegründet hat (alt-network.com). Nankunda Katangaza berichtet über die spannende und kreative Legal-Tech-Szene auf dem afrikanischen Kontinent.

     

    Die Folge endet mit einem Buchtipp (Hartung/Bues/Halbleib, Legal Tech. A Practitioner's Guide). 

     

    ***Werbung***

    Sponsor der ersten Folge des Rechtsgespräch-Podcasts ist Juris.

    juris – Das Rechtsportal bietet als führender Anbieter digitaler Rechtsinformationen umfassenden Zugriff auf juristische Fachliteratur, Gesetze und aktuelle Entscheidungen. Mit juris arbeiten Sie stets aktuell, rechtssicher und effizient. Jetzt informieren und gratis testen unter https:/www.juris.de/jportal/nav/startseite/startseite.jsp?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=podcast_juris.  

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    00:00:00 Begrüßung

    00:00:34 Was ist ein Rechtsgespräch?

    00:02:51 Paul Nemitz: Künstliche Intelligenz und ihre Regulierung

    00:16:00 In eigener Sache: Feedback erbeten!

    00:16:32 Nankunda Katangaza: Legal Tech in Africa

    00:26:45 Lesetipp: Hartung/Bues/Halbleib, Legal Tech.

    00:29:37 Vorschau auf Folge 2: Crispin Passmore, Patricia Litten u.a.

    S2E8 - Legal Needs Assessment in Saskatchewan

    S2E8 - Legal Needs Assessment in Saskatchewan

    To better understand the access to justice issues in Saskatchewan, the College of Law and the Law Society of Saskatchewan are launching a Legal Needs Assessment. Our guests include Tim Brown, Q.C., Executive Director at the Law Society of Saskatchewan; Brea Lowenberger, Director of CREATE Justice and Access to Justice Coordinator at the University of Saskatchewan College of Law; and Heather Heavin, Associate Dean, Research and Graduate Studies at the College of Law.


    S2E7 - Affordable Legal Services

    S2E7 - Affordable Legal Services

    Cost is a significant factor for people trying to access legal services. This episode focuses on how unbundling legal services can be a cost effective and efficient alternative for people looking for legal help. Our guests include John-Paul Boyd, an accredited family law arbitrator based in Alberta, Sonali Sharma founder of Athena Law in British Columbia and Lisa Eisen, founder of Family Law: A La Carte in Ontario. 

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