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29 September 2021
Issue: 7950 / Categories: Legal News , Profession , Legal aid focus
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No access to justice

Legal aid deserts have sprung up around the country as practitioners move to more economically viable fields, retire or leave the profession

The Law Society has published interactive maps detailing the extent of the problem, with people living in areas without a major city particularly badly hit. The south west, north east and north west are bereft in almost all legal and local authority areas, and Wales has sparse coverage.

Law Society president I Stephanie Boyce said: ‘Our analysis shows people on lower incomes who face terrifying legal issues from domestic abuse to homelessness or who need to challenge inadequate care or education from their local authority increasingly can’t get the expert legal advice to which they are entitled.’

Many cases that could be resolved through early intervention were spiralling unnecessarily, she said, evictions were on the rise yet 23 million people lived in a local authority without a single housing legal aid service. View the maps at: www.lawsociety.org.uk/campaigns/legal-aid-deserts.

Issue: 7950 / Categories: Legal News , Profession , Legal aid focus
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MOVERS & SHAKERS

42BR Barristers—4 Brick Court

42BR Barristers—4 Brick Court

42BR Barristers to be joined by leading family law set, 4 Brick Court, this summer

Winckworth Sherwood—Rubianka Winspear

Winckworth Sherwood—Rubianka Winspear

Real estate and construction energy offering boosted by partner hire

Gateley Legal—Daniel Walsh

Gateley Legal—Daniel Walsh

Firm bolsters real estate team with partner hire in Birmingham

NEWS
A wave of housing and procedural reforms is set to test the limits of tribunal capacity. In his latest Civil Way column for NLJ this week, Stephen Gold charts sweeping change as the Renters’ Rights Act 2025 begins biting
Plans to reduce jury trials risk missing the real problem in the criminal justice system. Writing in NLJ this week, David Wolchover of Ridgeway Chambers argues the crown court backlog is fuelled not by juries but weak cases slipping through a flawed ‘50%’ prosecution test
Emerging technologies may soon transform how courts determine truth in deeply personal disputes. In this week's NLJ, Madhavi Kabra of 1 Hare Court and Harry Lambert of Outer Temple Chambers explore how neurotechnology could reshape family law
A controversial protest case has reignited debate over the limits of free expression. In NLJ this week, Nicholas Dobson examines a Quran-burning incident testing public order law
The courts have drawn a firm line under attempts to extend arbitration appeals. Writing in NLJ this week, Masood Ahmed of the University of Leicester highlights that if the High Court refuses permission under s 68 of the Arbitration Act 1996, that is the end
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