Document Author
Year Published
Topic
- (-) Remove Articles & SRLN Briefs filter Articles & SRLN Briefs
- (-) Remove Courts filter Courts
- (-) Remove Self-Help Centers filter Self-Help Centers
- 100% Access to Justice (4) Apply 100% Access to Justice filter
- Trial Court Self-Help (4) Apply Trial Court Self-Help filter
- Best Practices for Self-Help Centers (2) Apply Best Practices for Self-Help Centers filter
- Clerk, Self-Help Center Staff, and Librarian Ethics (2) Apply Clerk, Self-Help Center Staff, and Librarian Ethics filter
- Ethics Education (2) Apply Ethics Education filter
- Strategic Planning (2) Apply Strategic Planning filter
- Allied Professionals (1) Apply Allied Professionals filter
- Judges (1) Apply Judges filter
- Judicial Ethics (1) Apply Judicial Ethics filter
- Linking a Self-Help Center to Other Services (1) Apply Linking a Self-Help Center to Other Services filter
- Simplification (1) Apply Simplification filter
Tags
Post date
Search results
Article: Ensuring Access to Justice in Tough Economic Times (Broccolina & Zorza 2008)
This article outlines seven suggestions for the courts which require relatively small or easily found upfront investment and minor ongoing expenditures. This article first appeared in the November-December 2008 (Volume 92, Number 3) of JUDICATURE, the Jou ...
Article: Some First Thoughts On Court Simplification: The Key To Civil Access And Justice Transformation (Zorza 2013)
From the Abstract: Given the discrepancy between access to justice needs and the resources that are realistically made available, current incremental approaches are almost bound to fail. The only realistic path to providing 100% of litigants with meaningf ...
Article: No Legal Advice from Court Personnel- What Does that Mean (Greacen 1995)
This is the seminal article that explores the underlying rationale that resulted in the blanket prohibition of clerk's not being able to provide information to the public for fear that it would be advice. In the article, Greacen suggests the framewor ...
Article: Community Courts and Family (Chase, Alexander, Miller 2000)
The authors introduce the idea of a community court as an interaction among courts, social service agencies, and the community. They discuss several models, prominent among them the Midtown Community Court in Manhattan, before going on to apply community ...