Table of Contents
- Executive Summary
- Introduction
- Methodology
- Definitions: The Landscape of Forms of Law-related Assistance
- Lawyers as primary legal service providers
- Non-lawyer forms of law-related assistance
- Technology-enabled law-related assistance
- Context: The Current Paradigm in Canada and Comparative Jurisdictions
- Access to Justice, Community Justice Help and Legal Empowerment
- (In)Access to justice and lawyer assistance in Canada and comparative jurisdictions
- Non-lawyers and the justice needs of marginalized communities
- Lawyer-centricity as a damper on access to justice
- Community justice help, legal capability, and legal empowerment
- Looking at Community Justice Help
- Setting the context: community justice help as an access to justice strategy
- The spectrum of community justice help
- Surveying examples of community justice help
- The use of technology to support community justice help
- Looking at community justice help: summing up
- Community Justice Help and Quality
- Evaluation of law-related assistance by not-for-profit community organizations
- Evaluation of legal services provided by non-lawyer licensed legal professionals
- Other studies relating to lawyers and non-lawyers, including “where lawyers matter”
- Community justice help – what the evaluation literature tells us: summing up
- Conclusion: Advancing Community Justice Help
- Appendix: Canadian Regulatory Frameworks: Jurisdiction by Jurisdiction
- Ontario
- Alberta
- British Columbia
- Manitoba
- Saskatchewan
- Nova Scotia
- New Brunswick
- Prince Edward Island
- Newfoundland and Labrador
- Quebec
- Yukon
- Nunavut
- Bibliography of Works Cited
- Date modified: