Institutional Repository at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria Univ. of Wellington
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    21777 research outputs found

    Cell and Developmental Biology

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    Organisational Behaviour

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    Engineering Mathematics Foundations

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    Cybersecurity Fundamentals

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    Medical Microbiology

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    Access Denied: Barriers to Civil Legal Aid and Justice in New Zealand

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    This paper addresses the growing access to justice crisis in New Zealand with a particular focus on civil legal aid. Due to rising legal costs, the civil justice system is becoming largely inaccessible for a substantial portion of the population. Low-to- middle-income New Zealanders are disproportionately affected by the inaccessibility of the system and legal aid’s failures. These individuals are effectively excluded from seeking legal remedies. This exclusion impedes their ability to protect their rights and undermines the rule of law by fostering systemic inequalities. Despite being designed to bridge the ‘justice gap’, the civil legal aid system has been widely criticised for its stringent eligibility criteria, financial disincentives, and the shortage of legal aid lawyers. The shortcomings create substantial barriers to justice. As a result of the inaccessibility, many are turning to self-representation. Part II examines access to justice in New Zealand, beginning with its historical roots and milestones. Part III explores the civil justice system’s significance, highlighting how society's perception of the system contributes to its inaccessibility. Part IV explores the purpose and structure of the civil legal aid system, highlighting the systemic barriers burdening the system. Part V identifies the three primary issues undermining the system: financial burden, eligibility constraints and the shortage of civil legal aid lawyers. This part then discusses the rise in self-representation as a direct consequence of these failures. The paper concludes by holding that the current system is insufficient to provide adequate access to justice

    From Courthouse to Publishing House: The Accessibility of Case Law in New Zealand

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    This paper examines the accessibility of case law in New Zealand. First, it identifies the inherent attributes of case law that make accessibility harder to achieve, noting that the precedent-driven approach to lawmaking in the common law system means that case law is multitudinous and harder to interpret than legislation, and difficult to sort into distinct areas of law. Secondly, it explains why accessibility is, nevertheless, a valuable aspiration through the fundamental justifications of the rule of law, open justice and the healthy development of the law. This paper then discusses some of the major contributors to and detractors from the accessibility of case law through the lens of the lifecycle of a judgment: from the way it is written, to the way it is disseminated, the impact of suppression orders on its dissemination, law reporting, and its discoverability in legal databases. It concludes that the accessibility of case law in New Zealand would be greatly enhanced if the judiciary assumed a greater role as a legal publisher rather than simply an author of judgments, including by investing in technological improvements to judgment dissemination

    State to State Aid and Intervention: Permission to Help Yourself?

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    This paper examines how some donor states use aid to influence and intervene in the affairs of receiving states. It starts from the assumption that aid is generally good and altruistic. The analysis of state behaviour in this paper leads to a conclusion that this is not always the case because aid can be used by donors as a tool for intervention. The paper begins by examining international agreements and instruments which demonstrate that obligations to aid can be vague, providing little practical guidance on how assistance should be rendered and what may be taken in return. It follows by providing examples of “aid for policy” agreements, under which states give aid but receive significant benefits themselves. These examples illustrate how such agreements can erode a receiving state’s ability to self- determine and how donors use aid to further their own interests. The paper then considers whether this behaviour is lawful under the principle of non-intervention. It ultimately concludes that it is lawful to provide aid to influence policy, unless the consent to that aid is found to be invalid. It may, however, be arguable in particularly serious circumstances that it is unlawful to withdraw aid for the purposes of intervening with another state’s affairs. The paper finishes by outlining some potential solutions which could address the problem it has highlighted but acknowledges that it is a complex issue which will be hard, if not impossible, to solve entirely

    Company and Partnership Law

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    Imagining an Immigration System Grounded in Te Tiriti o Waitangi and Strong Legal Pluralism - a Chinese Manuwhiri Perspective

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    Tauiwi/Migrants of Colour face systemic pressures to assimilate into the settler state, which in turn induces their complicity in the settler-colonial displacement of Tāngata Whenua. However, the flourishing of Tauiwi of Colour communities cannot come at the expense of indigenous peoples and indigenous sovereignty. Written from a Chinese tauiwi perspective, this essay looks beyond the immigration system of the New Zealand state, and towards migration pathways rooted in Te Tiriti o Waitangi (Te Tiriti) and relationships with Tāngata Whenua. Firstly, this essay discusses the foundations for its analysis: legal pluralism, Te Tiriti o Waitangi and tino rangatiratanga, concluding that tino rangatiratanga cannot be reduced to a Māori right to consultation in Crown decision- making. Next, this essay conducts both a legal pluralist and sociolegal analysis of the immigration system, finding that it demonstrates very weak legal pluralism and fails to honour Te Tiriti. Thirdly, this essay explores what a Tiriti-based immigration system could look like, drawing on the work of Tahu Kukutai and Arama Rata on a “treaty-based immigration system of manaakitanga” and weaving in insights from legal pluralism and Māori legal scholarship. This essay finds that it is in the interests of both Māori and Chinese communities for the current immigration system to be transformed into one that honours Te Tiriti and reflects strong legal pluralism

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