Funding legal aid / M.I Mafokwane

Government programs usually do not earn proceeds; this is making it difficult to fund legal aid. Legal aid has a mandate to provide legal services to the poor on state expense. During this time of economic crises and continuous recession, it is becoming difficult to increase service delivery, which...

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Main Author: Mafokwane, M I
Language:en
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10394/14978
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-nwu-oai-dspace.nwu.ac.za-10394-149782016-03-16T03:59:17ZFunding legal aid / M.I MafokwaneMafokwane, M IGovernment programs usually do not earn proceeds; this is making it difficult to fund legal aid. Legal aid has a mandate to provide legal services to the poor on state expense. During this time of economic crises and continuous recession, it is becoming difficult to increase service delivery, which includes legal services to the poor. For legal aid to expand its services and to deliver quality legal services, it needs resources. Resources in the form of money require adequate funding and cost effectiveness. The purpose of this study is to examine how legal aid can be funded and how the budgeting system can support service delivery during fiscal deficits in conditions of recession and economic frustrations. With the current economic status, it has been a challenge for organisations to balance the organisational objectives with economic factors to overcome budget constraints. Data Collected from Legal Aid South Africa is used to test two research questions. Results confirm that the use of alternative dispute resolution save the cost of litigation by using more paralegal avoiding the use of more legal professionals; the use 'of internal staff is cost effective than the use of judicare (external legal professionals); trust account is a powerful tool to increase funds for legal aid and that legal aid can be funded by third-party investors.Thesis (MBA) North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 20122015-11-05T19:53:14Z2015-11-05T19:53:14Z2012Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10394/14978en
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language en
sources NDLTD
description Government programs usually do not earn proceeds; this is making it difficult to fund legal aid. Legal aid has a mandate to provide legal services to the poor on state expense. During this time of economic crises and continuous recession, it is becoming difficult to increase service delivery, which includes legal services to the poor. For legal aid to expand its services and to deliver quality legal services, it needs resources. Resources in the form of money require adequate funding and cost effectiveness. The purpose of this study is to examine how legal aid can be funded and how the budgeting system can support service delivery during fiscal deficits in conditions of recession and economic frustrations. With the current economic status, it has been a challenge for organisations to balance the organisational objectives with economic factors to overcome budget constraints. Data Collected from Legal Aid South Africa is used to test two research questions. Results confirm that the use of alternative dispute resolution save the cost of litigation by using more paralegal avoiding the use of more legal professionals; the use 'of internal staff is cost effective than the use of judicare (external legal professionals); trust account is a powerful tool to increase funds for legal aid and that legal aid can be funded by third-party investors. === Thesis (MBA) North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2012
author Mafokwane, M I
spellingShingle Mafokwane, M I
Funding legal aid / M.I Mafokwane
author_facet Mafokwane, M I
author_sort Mafokwane, M I
title Funding legal aid / M.I Mafokwane
title_short Funding legal aid / M.I Mafokwane
title_full Funding legal aid / M.I Mafokwane
title_fullStr Funding legal aid / M.I Mafokwane
title_full_unstemmed Funding legal aid / M.I Mafokwane
title_sort funding legal aid / m.i mafokwane
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10394/14978
work_keys_str_mv AT mafokwanemi fundinglegalaidmimafokwane
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