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Canadian coalition calls for urgent action to uphold civil liberties and Charter rights at protests and encampments across the country May 15, 2024 | Read more
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The Immigrant Workers Centre to receive 2018 Peter Gillespie Social Justice Award Apr 18, 2018 | Read more
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CALL FOR PARTICIPANTS | Inter Pares and SUWRA launch Canadian civil society working group on Sudan Jun 25, 2024 | Read more
Round Table with Vigilance OGM: Agroecology, feminist approaches and the struggle against agrochemicals Oct 7, 2024 | Read more
Advocacy is resistance: Navigating anti-LGBTQI+ violence in post-war Guatemala May 23, 2024 | Read more
Access to the law for all news : Insight & Analysis September 14, 2021 Share Print The Sudanese Organization for Research and Development's legal clinics connected Najwa (right) with lawyer Zeinab (left) to support her through her separation from her husband. Credit: SORD “Access to justice is the legal expression of equality, if not citizenship.” For many people, legal questions only arise when there is a problem, and the only solution is recourse to the justice system. Shouldn’t access to justice go beyond conflict resolution and demonstrate equality, as expressed above by Pierre Noreau, professor in the Faculty of Law at the Université de Montréal? Inter Pares and our counterparts believe that the answer is yes. One of the ways that we promote social justice is by facilitating access to the formal justice system. It is important that the law and the various ways of accessing this system be widely understood so that everyone has a sense of equality before the law and dares to demand justice. The Sudanese Organization for Research and Development (SORD), our counterpart in Sudan, has a large gender justice program that facilitates access to justice for women and aims to reform discriminatory laws and policies, for example those that allow child marriage or conflate adultery and rape. Through its legal clinics, SORD supports women to understand their rights under the law and to access justice. For example, for the last several years, SORD has accompanied Najwa, a young woman who is involved in a lengthy divorce process in the context of spousal violence. Access to justice for victims of gender-based or sexual violence remains difficult everywhere, whether in Sudan or Canada or El Salvador. In El Salvador, our counterpart La Colectiva Feminista also relies on lawyers to assist women who are experiencing violence and raises awareness among justice officials about the barriers including cultural prejudices that exist in the system. For Inter Pares and our counterparts, the formal justice system is a tool to access equality. Supporting people seeking justice to know their rights and to find their way through the day-to-day legal system is key to increasing access to justice. The road to full access remains long. Supporting people seeking justice to know their rights and to find their way through the day-to-day legal system is key to increasing access to justice. Gallery1 imagesClick to expand Learn more Read our September Bulletin, Overcoming Barriers to Justice Dismantling Sudan’s shadow pandemicWatch Stories of Struggle Add new comment You must have JavaScript enabled to use this form. Your name Comment * Save Leave this field blank