{"id":407,"date":"2011-02-15T17:56:51","date_gmt":"2011-02-15T22:56:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.law.cornell.edu\/voxpop\/2011\/02\/15\/accessible-law\/"},"modified":"2011-02-15T17:56:51","modified_gmt":"2011-02-15T22:56:51","slug":"accessible-law","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blog.law.cornell.edu\/voxpop\/2011\/02\/15\/accessible-law\/","title":{"rendered":"Accessible Law"},"content":{"rendered":"

Professor Richard Leiter, on his blog, The Life of Books<\/a><\/em>, poses The 21st Century Law Library Conundrum: Free Law and Paying to Understand It<\/a>:<\/p>\n

The digital revolution, that once upon a time promised free access to legal materials, will deliver on that promise; it’s just that the free materials it will deliver, even if it comprises the sum total of all primary law in the country at every level and jurisdiction, will amount to only a minor portion of the materials that lawyers need in order to practice law, and the public needs in order to understand it.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

This article explores what more we need in order to understand the law and how this need can be met, from a UK perspective.<\/p>\n

Free acce\"voxmaze.jpg\"<\/a>ss to law<\/h3>\n

Free access to primary law is of course a prerequisite for the interpretation and understanding of the law. In the UK and most countries with a common law tradition, the cause of free access to law is espoused by the Free Access to Law Movement<\/a>, a collective of legal information institutes that began with the creation of the Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute (LII<\/a>) in 1992. In the UK we are represented by the British and Irish Legal Information Institute (BAILII<\/a>), set up in 2000 with the enormous help of the pioneering Australasian Legal Information Institute (AustLII<\/a>). In October 2002, at the 4th Law via Internet Conference in Montreal, the LIIs published a joint statement of their philosophy of access to law in the following terms<\/a>:<\/p>\n

Legal information institutes of the world, meeting in Montreal, declare that,<\/p>\n