Vancouver, 11 September 2015 – The
number of self-represented litigants in British Columbia’s courts has been
steadily increasing. In her 2013 report, University of Windsor Faculty of Law
professor Dr. Julie Macfarlane wrote that the inability to afford legal counsel
is the most consistently-cited reason for self-representation and a lack of
access to justice.
In response, the British Columbia
Law Institute is starting a new project on litigation financing to explore the
public, private, and third-party funding opportunities used in British
Columbia, Canada, and in other commonwealth jurisdictions. The project will explore
the potential opportunities for structural, systemic, or legal changes that
could improve the financing options for litigants.
“There is a need to identify
structural and legal changes necessary to facilitate the greater participation
of low-income individuals in court processes,” said Kathleen Cunningham,
Executive Director of the BCLI. “By exploring a selection of options for
litigation financing and evaluating their utility and potential for
implementation, this research will provide an important first step towards
improving access to justice in British Columbia.”
The final Study
Paper is expected to be available at
www.bcli.org in January 2017.
This project has been made
possible thanks to generous funding from the Law Foundation of British Columbia.
The British Columbia Law Institute
strives to be a leader in law reform by carrying out the best in scholarly
law-reform research and writing and the best in outreach relating to law
reform.
Contact: Alexandre
Blondin
Research Lawyer
(604) 822 0981
ablondin@bcli.org
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