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Equity in Legal Access
Disparities faced by Indigenous peoples, newcomers, and marginalized groups.
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SUMMARY - Equity in Legal Access

An Indigenous person facing criminal charges encounters a justice system rooted in the same colonial structures that operated residential schools and criminalized their cultural practices. A newcomer with limited English tries to navigate family court without understanding legal terminology or procedural expectations, unable to afford an interpreter. A person with disabilities finds courthouse entrances inaccessible and court materials unavailable in formats they can use.

Alberta
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RIPPLE

This thread documents how changes to Equity in Legal Access may affect other areas of Canadian civic life. Share your knowledge: What happens downstream when this topic changes? What industries, communities, services, or systems feel the impact? Guidelines: - Describe indirect or non-obvious connections - Explain the causal chain (A leads to B because...) - Real-world examples strengthen your contribution Comments are ranked by community votes. Well-supported causal relationships inform our simulation and planning tools.
Alberta
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