Full Description
The authors set the following research goals: 1) to define the concept of free legal aid, taking into consideration the standards of the Council of Europe (especially from the European Convention on Human Rights and soft law standards) and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union; 2) to pinpoint solutions in the field of free legal assistance on the example of the analysed countries as Belarus, France, Denmark, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Ukraine, United Kingdom, United United States of America, Poland, Switzerland, Spain, Sweden.
Contents
Jerzy Jaskiernia: Free Legal Aid in the Axiological System of the Council of Europe — Agnieszka Franczak, Bogusław Przywora: International and EU Standards for the Protection of Taxpayers' Rights and the Formalized System of Pre-Trial Free Legal Aid in Poland: An Approach to Analysis — Michał Bożek: Free Legal Aid in the Federal Republic of Germany — Grzegorz Krawiec: The System of Free Legal Aid in the Netherlands — Bogusław Przywora, Aleksander Wróbel: The System of Free Legal Aid in the Kingdom of Sweden — Marcin Grzybowski, Marian Grzybowski: Free Legal Aid in Denmark and Norway — Ksenia Kakareko: Legal Aid in the Republic of Belarus — Dávid Tóth: Legal Aid and Cooperation in Criminal Matters in Hungary — Marta Osuchowska: Free Legal Aid in Spain — Dorota Kottmann, Grażyna Szpor: Access to Information About Law in Switzerland — Beata Nuzzo: The System of Free Legal Aid in the Italian Republic — Małgorzata Augustyniak: Forms of Free Legal Aid in France — Maria Kalinowska: Free Legal Aid in the United Kingdom — Maria Kalinowska: Free Legal Aid in the United States of America — Ivan Pankevych: Free Legal Aid in Ukraine — Ilnytskyi Oleh: University Legal Clinic in Ukraine — Agnieszka Gloria Kamińska: Navigating Equitable Horizons: The Evolution and Prospects of Legal Aid in the Republic of Malta — Agnieszka Piskorz- Ryń: Access to Information on the Law from the Perspective of the Access to Public Information Act — Authors