Book contents
- Global Pro Bono
- Cambridge Studies in Law and Society
- Global Pro Bono
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Chapter One What Is Global about Pro Bono and What Is Global Pro Bono About?
- Part One The Americas
- Chapter Two Rationalizing Pro Bono: Corporate Social Responsibility and the Reinvention of Legal Professionalism in Elite American Law Firms
- Chapter Three Pro Bono Legal Work in Canada
- Chapter Four Private Law Practice and the Public Good: Individual Pro Bono’s Institutionalization in São Paulo Law Firms
- Chapter Five The Mandarins of the Law: Pro Bono Legal Work in Argentina, Chile, and Colombia
- Part Two Europe
- Part Three OCEANIA
- Part Four Africa
- Part Five Asia
- Index
- Cambridge Studies in Law and Society
Chapter Three - Pro Bono Legal Work in Canada
from Part One - The Americas
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 May 2022
- Global Pro Bono
- Cambridge Studies in Law and Society
- Global Pro Bono
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Chapter One What Is Global about Pro Bono and What Is Global Pro Bono About?
- Part One The Americas
- Chapter Two Rationalizing Pro Bono: Corporate Social Responsibility and the Reinvention of Legal Professionalism in Elite American Law Firms
- Chapter Three Pro Bono Legal Work in Canada
- Chapter Four Private Law Practice and the Public Good: Individual Pro Bono’s Institutionalization in São Paulo Law Firms
- Chapter Five The Mandarins of the Law: Pro Bono Legal Work in Argentina, Chile, and Colombia
- Part Two Europe
- Part Three OCEANIA
- Part Four Africa
- Part Five Asia
- Index
- Cambridge Studies in Law and Society
Summary
In this chapter, we examine the historical growth of pro bono legal services in Canada and contemporary patterns of pro bono engagement within the bar. We employ mixed methods, incorporating in-depth interviews with lawyers, legal educators, and leaders in the Canadian bar and a large-scale social survey of attorneys. We begin by tracing the historical development of government-funded legal aid in Canada – through the roles of local bar associations and government-led legislation – and the rise of pro bono service in response to declining resources for legal aid. Next, we outline structural factors connected to the diffusion of pro bono service, especially the spread of nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in Canada, and we identify several distinguishing characteristics associated with pro bono culture in the country. Our discussion leads us to consider professional-based interests associated with the expansion of pro bono and residual areas of contestation between legal aid and private pro bono legal service providers in the quest to improve access to justice.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Global Pro BonoCauses, Context, and Contestation, pp. 112 - 143Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022
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