Authors:LAG
Created:2017-09-27
Last updated:2023-09-18
Bach report published
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Administrator
Lord Bach's Access to Justice Commission has published its final report, available here. It is a detailed and thoughtful report, which should provoke further debate about the impact on access to justice - and particularly those who can't get it - following the reforms of recent years. There is a lengthy list of recommendations, which fall into three main categories:
The creation of a new statutory enforceable "right to justice" and the creation of a Justice Commission
Reform of the legal aid scheme, including widening and simplifying the means test and contributions, increasing legal aid scope to restore most family, some immigration, and cases involving children, as well as reforms to judicial review, inquest and exceptional case funding, and replacing the LAA with an independent body and simplifying administration
Wider and better public legal education and a universal advice and information portal. Sir Henry Brooke,  the retired Court of Appeal judge, was one of the commissioners. Since the publication of the report he has posted a series of blogs, well worth reading, looking at some of the background to the Commission's recommendations.