Abstract

Legal aid is the provision of free or subsidized legal services to mainly poor and vulnerable people who cannot afford advocate fees. The right to legal aid is well rooted in the international, regional human rights treaty framework to which Kenya party. The provision of legal aid addresses the concerns of the poor and vulnerable by focusing on challenges that foil access to justice. In recognition of this, the Government of Kenya promulgated the Legal Aid Act, 2016 establishing the National Legal Aid Service to provide legal aid services to needy, marginalized, and vulnerable persons. This was a very important move, propelling the Government to prioritize legal aid provision as a right as well as a necessity for promotion of rule of law and access to justice. However, it is imperative to understand that the duty does not squarely fall on the State alone. There is need for non-state actors’ support from private entities like law firms, NGOs, Law schools and any other qualified legal personnel. Without a doubt, several non-state actors are actively offering free or subsidized legal aid and the purpose of this paper is to look at the lessons faced by a non-state actor from the experience of the authors organizing and running events to offer free legal aid. This includes expounding on challenges faced such as constrained funding, language barrier, illiteracy, and ignorance of legal rights. The punchline here is that there is room for all stakeholder to come together and forge a way forward for an improved legal aid framework in Kenya.
 Keywords: Law schools, Legal aid clinics, Legal aid, Free legal services, Kenya, access to justice, rule of law.

Highlights

  • In recent years, the value of law schools involvement in legal aid delivery has gained footing in Kenya

  • Practice Report doubt, several non-state actors are actively offering free or subsidized legal aid and the purpose of this paper is to look at the lessons faced by a non-state actor from the experience of the authors organizing and running events to offer free legal aid

  • This article is designed to assess the role of law schools in promoting the right of legal aid through running legal aid clinics in Kenya

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Summary

Introduction

The value of law schools involvement in legal aid delivery has gained footing in Kenya. This article is designed to assess the role of law schools in promoting the right of legal aid through running legal aid clinics in Kenya. The article highlights the challenges faced by law schools in the provision of legal aid and proposes strategies for sustainable legal aid service. A contrast is drawn from the status of law school-based legal aid clinics in Kenya with those in South Africa. This is followed by Part III that entails a detailed description of how the legal aid clinics ran by the Mount Kenya University School of Law were organized by the legal aid committee, of which the authors were members of. Thereafter, Part IV sets out the internal and external challenges faced in the running of the legal aid clinics, and lastly Part V discusses the lessons learnt together with proposals on how to mitigate those challenges

Part I
Ibid 3
Part II
Part III
Part VI. Conclusion
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