Civil society organisations and institutions can facilitate people's access to rights and justice by:
- Informing. Enabling entitled persons to know that they can exercise their rights. Certainly, being aware of one’s rights is the first step towards exercising them, and consequently a prerequisite of accessibility. This also includes providing information that is comprehensible by the person concerned, eg. translated into different languages.
- Providing legal assistance and helping to engage legal proceedings. This may imply the identification of and meeting those who are concerned, especially homeless people and asylum seekers. It could also pertain to establishing an assistance desk in an accessible place, eg. in a railway station, etc.
- Facilitating access to justice by using complaints instruments, such as the collective complaints procedure of the European Social Charter or by identifying ways of accessing rights for those who do not have a residence address.
Picture by A Varos Mindenkie and Avvocato di Strada
Below are some examples of types of actions (in orange) and policies (in green) that aim to facilitate the access to justice.
Legal support
All over Europe, different organisations reach out to victims of poverty (homeless people, asylum seekers, etc.) to enable them to know their rights and have access to free legal aid.
Below are examples of type actions (in orange) and policies (in green) that provide legal support.
Local Communities Protection Committee
Publié le : 2013-08-14 15:35 -Collective claim against air pollution
Publié le : 2013-08-13 15:50 -Business centre for people with disabilities
Publié le : 2013-08-13 15:14 -Social Cohesion Clinic
Publié le : 2013-07-16 13:42 -Street Lawyers
Publié le : 2013-05-14 10:40 -
Street lawyers work to inform people in poverty, and more specifically homeless people, about their rights and to assist them in legal proceedings. |
Reference Address
Access to rights is often subject to official proof of residence, which marginalises the Roma and the homeless persons. It is necessary to break the link between entitlement to rights and having a fixed address. At present, having such an address is a condition for access to numerous services and rights, such as the right to vote.
Below are examples of the types of actions (in orange) and policies (in green) that enable access to a reference address which is often requested to have access to certain rights.
La domiciliation associative
Publié le : 2013-05-14 12:34 -
In France, the provision of a registered address enables an asylum seeker, who is homeless, to declare his or her address at any NGO that has been specially approved by the French administration. |
Virtual addresses
Publié le : 2013-05-14 10:45 -
This practice consists in creating physical or virtual places that have the same legal force as private homes, which anyone can declare as their official address when voting or claiming entitlements. |
Other Actions and Policies
Civil movement "Protect Yourself"
Publié le : 2013-08-16 13:36 -Local Communities Protection Committee
Publié le : 2013-08-14 15:35 -"Outstretched Hand" – Reception offices for disadvantaged persons & people with disabilities
Publié le : 2013-08-14 14:11 -Collective claim against air pollution
Publié le : 2013-08-13 15:50 -Business centre for people with disabilities
Publié le : 2013-08-13 15:14 -Greek Forum of Migrants
Publié le : 2013-08-01 15:56 -Released Ex-colorificio /Project Rebeldia
Publié le : 2013-07-22 11:03 -Social Cohesion Clinic
Publié le : 2013-07-16 13:42 -Consumers' Schools
Publié le : 2013-07-02 11:07 -Please connect to write a contribution.