{"id":47,"date":"2009-07-15T04:46:22","date_gmt":"2009-07-15T09:46:22","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.law.cornell.edu\/voxpop\/2009\/07\/15\/is-free-access-to-law-here-to-stay\/"},"modified":"2009-09-23T09:28:01","modified_gmt":"2009-09-23T14:28:01","slug":"is-free-access-to-law-here-to-stay","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blog.law.cornell.edu\/voxpop\/2009\/07\/15\/is-free-access-to-law-here-to-stay\/","title":{"rendered":"Is Free Access to Law here to stay?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Recently, LexUM<\/a>, SAFLII<\/a> and friends commenced a global study on Free Access to Law.<\/a> It poses the pertinent question: is free access to law here to stay? The goal of the project is to produce a best-practices handbook, collect open-access case studies, and publish an online library on the subject.\u00a0 The ultimate aim of all these activities is to enable future free access to law projects to choose best practices and adapt to local contexts that may have more in common than it initially appears.<\/p>\n This April we kicked off the project in the beautiful African bush <\/a>with three days of introspection, sharing (for the teenage LIIs) and learning (for the toddler LIIs).<\/p>\n The project seeks to study and link two central concepts \u2013 the concept of success <\/em>of a free access to law project and the concept of sustainability<\/em>. Ivan Mokanov<\/a>, who wrote the original project proposal, puts forward a simple thesis that relates the two:<\/p>\n By making law freely available, a legal information institute (LII) produces outcomes that benefit its target audience, thereby creating incentives among the target audience or other stakeholders to sustain the LII\u2019s ongoing operations and development.<\/strong> In a broad definition, sustainability <\/em>is seen as the ability to deliver services that provide sufficient value to their target audience, so that either that audience or other stakeholders acting on its behalf choose to fund the ongoing operation and evolution of that service.<\/p>\n The project looks at a sustainability chain:<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The words and brilliant logic of fictional psychopath Hannibal Lecter to Clarice Starling in The Silence of the Lambs<\/a>\u00a0 might serve as a guide to the sustainability chain:<\/p>\n First principles, Clarice. Simplicity. Read Marcus Aurelius. Of each particular thing ask: what is it in itself? What is its nature? What does he do, this man you seek? <\/em><\/p>\n The Need<\/strong><\/em> Different stages of development highlight different needs, and the sustainability chain gives equal weight to addressing each. A free access to law project is just as successful if it manages to provide up=to-date information to judges who until recently applied the law from their 1970s law school textbooks as it is if it provides a state-of-the-art point in time legislation service to practicing lawyers. There seems to be an agreement that, as it grows through its stages of development — as Tom Bruce <\/a>kindly defined them: establishment, incubation and \u201cgoing concern\u201d — a sustainable LII closes a chapter of success and continues on to respond to a new need within its target audience.<\/p>\n The Environment<\/strong><\/em> An important environmental indicator is the availability of an infrastructure to support circulation of information. LIIs operating in developing countries often face the roadblock of lack of technology or lack of knowledge of the use of technology at the source. While computers have made their way into most judges’ chambers and courtrooms, most are not connected to the Internet, or if they are, the connections are so slow as to bar convenient use. A judge once relayed that in the rural areas, courts, well-computerized using donor money, are unable to make use of the technology due to lack of electricity. It is not unheard of a clerk or court secretary to delete judgments from a computer once they have been printed, thus leaving one single hard copy of a judgment for the court files.<\/p>\n Developing countries\u2019 LIIs, as aptly pointed by my colleague Kerry Anderson in a post below<\/a>, often involves getting information from this<\/strong>:<\/p>\n
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\n<\/em>Linking free delivery of legal information to core benefits <\/a>such as\u00a0 support for the rule of law, open and accountable government and the importance of reducing insecurity in economic life can be difficult. Defining the subtler aspects of success<\/em> thus involves exploration and new methodologies.<\/p>\n
\nStart with a need or a problem which a LII has to address. An often seen example in my part of the world is a country completely lacking any structures for providing legal information, even commercial print publishers. Sometimes, too, legal information is available, and sometimes freely so, via official printers, government bodies or other creators of the information, but that availability does not necessarily equate to usability.<\/p>\n
\nThe context in which an LII operates is equally important in determining the success and subsequently the sustainability of a free access to law operation. An LII will thrive in an environment that provides rich data sources, and is amenable to and capable of reform and change, with a policy and legal framework favourable to the free dissemination of legal information. To bring this to the nitty-gritty level \u2013 a free access to law project needs support all the way from the political top down to the secretary and clerk of the court.<\/p>\n