Funding Florida Legal Aid (FFLA) provides civil legal aid to assist in improving the lives of vulnerable and low-income Floridians. FFLA funds local and statewide civil legal aid organizations to improve the administration of justice and increase the effectiveness and efficiency of the legal aid delivery system.
Take a look at the civil rights advocacy of Florida Justice Institutes and the cases and projects that they are working on to get an idea about current events.
The Resource Center for Access to Justice (ATJ) Initiatives serves judicial, private bar, and legal aid leaders who work together to provide people of low and modest income with meaningful access to their justice systems. The Center's two main focuses are: (1) Supporting the growth and development of state-based Access to Justice Commissions; and (2) Collecting and analyzing data on the various sources of funding for civil legal aid.
The Standing Committee on Legal Aid and Indigent Defense (SCLAID) has jurisdiction over matters related to the creation, maintenance, and enhancement of effective civil legal aid and criminal indigent defense delivery systems and services, including by: (a) advocating for meaningful access to the justice system for all; (b) supporting viable and effective plans to increase funding for legal aid and indigent defense delivery systems and services; and (c) developing standards and policy, disseminating best practices, and providing training and technical assistance.
Resources and reports produced by the Death Penalty Project on issues regarding access to justice and the death penalty. All of these resources may be helpful for researchers considering access to justice issues.
The Legal Services Corporation (LSC) website is a key resource for information on civil legal aid in the United States. It provides details on LSC's mission to promote equal access to justice by funding legal aid organizations that assist low-income Americans 1. The site includes data on the impact of legal aid, grant opportunities, and resources for legal aid providers. Additionally, it features reports, publications, and updates on legal services and initiatives aimed at supporting vulnerable populations.
The Justice Index is an online resource supporting policy reform. This site provides research illuminating the degree to which each US state has established, as law, selected best policies for ensuring access to justice for all people.
This link takes you to the publications and research produced by Federal Office for Access to Justice. You can access information on access to justice during COVID-19 and in rural areas.
This book focuses on the history of the provision of legal aid and legal assistance to the poor in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in eight different countries. It is the first such book to bring together historical work on legal aid in a comparative perspective, and allows readers to analogise and contrast historical narratives about free legal aid across countries. Legal aid developed as a result of industrialisation, urbanization, immigration, the rise of philanthropy, and what were viewed as new legal problems. Closely related, was the growing professionalisation of lawyers and the question of what duties lawyers owed society to perform free work. Yet, legal aid providers in many countries included lay women and men, leading at times to tensions with the bar. Furthermore, legal aid often became deeply politicized, creating dramatic conflicts concerning the rights of the poor to have equal access to justice.
For over a century, many have struggled to turn the Constitution's prime goal "to establish Justice" into reality for Americans who cannot afford lawyers through civil legal aid. This book explains how and why.American statesman Sargent Shriver called the Legal Services Program the "most important" of all the War on Poverty programs he started; American Bar Association president Edward Kuhn said its creation was the most important development in the history of the legal profession. Earl Johnson Jr., a former director of the War on Poverty's Legal Services Program, provides a vivid account of the entire history of civil legal aid from its inception in 1876 to the current day. The first to capture the full story of the dramatic, ongoing struggle to bring equal justice to those unable to afford a lawyer, this monumental three-volume work covers the personalities and events leading to a national legal aid movement--and decades later, the federal government's entry into the field, and its creation of a unique institution, an independent Legal Services Corporation, to run the program. The narrative also covers the landmark court victories the attorneys won and the political controversies those cases generated, along with the heated congressional battles over the shape and survival of the Legal Services Corporation. In the final chapters, the author assesses the current state of civil legal aid and its future prospects in the United States.
"Established in 1964, the federal Legal Services Program (later, Corporation) served a vast group of Americans desperately in need of legal counsel: the poor. At the program's zenith in 1981, more than 1,450 offices employing six thousand attorneys and three thousand paralegals worked to aid those who could not afford private attorneys. In Rationing Justice, Kris Shepard looks at this pioneering program's effect on the Deep South."
This collection includes both PDF and database versions of the Wanger Death Penalty Collection. A bibliographic index, with access to nearly 650 full text out-of-copyright works indexed in Wangers collection. Other death penalty-related publications include nearly 150 trials, 300 books, and periodicals, as well as relevant scholarly articles, an additional bibliography, and external links to further the researchers exploration of this topic.
BJS collects, analyze, publishes and disseminates information on crime, criminal offenders, victims of crime, and the operation of justice systems at all level of government. Data topics include criminal justice data, crime types, corrections, victims, law enforcement, Indian Country Justice, courts, state court caseload statistics, tribal courts, capital punishment, local jail inmates and jail facilities. BJS is a component of the Office of Justice Programs in the U.S. Department of Justice.
The National Archive of Criminal Justice Data (NACJD) archives and disseminates data on crime and justice for secondary analysis. The archive contains data from over 2,700 curated studies or statistical data series. NACJD archives large scale and well-known datasets, including the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS), the FBI?s Uniform Crime Reports (UCR), the FBI?s National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS), and the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods (PHDCN).
Special topics include child abuse and maltreatment, drugs and alcohol, gangs, guns and other weapons, homicide, juvenile delinquency and justice, prostitution, human trafficking and sex crimes, recidivism, Terrorism and hate crimes, violence against women, white-collar and environmental crime.
The Civil Rights Litigation Clearinghouse collects and presents documents and information from large-scale civil rights cases across the United States. The Civil Rights Litigation Clearinghouse provides the information needed to understand particular cases and the category as a whole. The site focuses on injunctive litigation—that is, on cases seeking policy or operational change—and on class actions.