Further resources on access to justice issues include the following (alphabetical by title):
- At what price justice? The impact of employment tribunal fees was published by the TUC in July 2014.
- Civil legal aid changes since 2013: the impact on people seeking help with legal problems was published by the House of Commons Library in January 2015.
- CLARITY – Complaints, Legal Assistance and Rights Information Tool for You (EU Fundamental Rights Agency)
- Court and Tribunal Fees. The Government response to consultation on further fees proposals was published in December 2015.
- Cut Off From Justice: The impact of excluding separated migrant children from legal aid (Children’s Society, 2015).
- Employment tribunal fees – Commons Library Standard Note was published in January 2015
- Equality, human rights and access to civil law justice: A literature review was published by the Equality and Human Rights Commission in October 2015.
- Fairer fees. Fixing the employment tribunal system was published by Citizens Advice in January 2015.
- Handbook on access to justice in Europe (pending)
- A House of Lords Library Note on The Future of Legal Aid was published in December 2015.
- Impact of changes to civil legal aid was published by the House of Commons Justice Committee in March 2015.
- The Implications for access to justice of certain of the Government’s proposals to reform legal aid by the Joint Committee on Human Rights, 2013.
- An Independent Review of the Mandatory Civil Legal Advice Gateway (Public Law Project, March 2015)
- Implementing reforms to civil legal aid. Thirty-sixth Report of Session 2014–15 was published by the House of Commons Committee of Public Accounts in January 2015.
- Mapping Administrative Justice and Tribunals in Scotland was published by the Scottish Tribunals & Administrative Justice Advisory Committee in February 2016. The Committee published Making Decisions Fairly with a case study annex in November 2015.
- Mid-Term Universal Periodic Review Report (Equality and Human Rights Commission, August 2014). This includes a section on ‘Access to civil law justice and legal aid’.
- Rights of Women research showing 40 per cent of women still unable to access family law legal aid (January 2016)
- The Rule of Law and Access to Justice (Bingham Centre resources)
- Sleepless nights: accessing justice without legal aid (Middlesex University and Toynbee Hall, November 2015)
- Survey of Not for Profit Legal Advice Providers in England and Wales was published in December 2015 by the Ministry of Justice.
- UK Administrative Justice Institute. A ‘virtual hub’ for administrative justice in the UK, funded by the Nuffield Foundation.
- Understanding Administrative Justice in Wales was published by Bangor University in November 2015.
- The Value and Effects of Judicial Review. The Nature of Claims, their Outcomes and Consequences was published by the Public Law Project, University of Essex and London School of Economics in October 2015.
- The Varying Paths to Justice. Mapping problem resolution routes for users and non-users of the civil, administrative and family justice systems was published by the Ministry of Justice in December 2015.