Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Michael Robertson is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Michael Robertson.


Journal of Law and Society | 2003

Large-scale Map or the A-Z? The Place of Self-help Services in Legal Aid

Jeffrey Michael Giddings; Michael Robertson

Australian legal aid agencies are increasing their reliance on self-help legal services as part of their service delivery mix. Self-help legal services seek to harness the productive capacity of consumers,enabling wider distribution of legal aid services. The move to self-help services as an alternative to traditional legal service delivery appears to have gained momentum in advance of any sound understandings of what legal consumers, and legal aid consumers in particular, are capable of. In addition to the cost benefits of providing self-help services rather than traditional legal services, these services have been promoted on the basis of their capacity to empower users to address their own legal matters. Examples of the misuse by government agencies of notions of empowerment emphasize the importance of ensuring the usefulness of self-help legal services.


South African Journal on Human Rights | 2016

Legal ethics education in South Africa: possibilities,challenges and opportunities

Michael Robertson; Helen Kruuse

Abstract The South African legal profession has been subject to harsh criticism in the last few years, leading to what some have called ‘an ethical crisis.’ Although this perception may or may not be warranted, there have been numerous calls for improved ethical legal practices by South African lawyers. This article seeks to contribute to a discussion about the importance of implementing legal ethics education in South African law schools. The authors (a) explore the meaning of ‘ethical legal practice’ by reference to the international literature; (b) examine the way in which legal ethics has so far been presented in the limited South African literature on the topic; (c) argue the need for a more thorough and critical literature on South African lawyers’ ethics, coupled with a commitment to developing a stronger legal ethics culture within the profession and the legal academia; and (d) suggest a possible approach for South African legal ethics education in the future, with reference to recent developments in other countries.


International Journal of The Legal Profession | 2005

To enable or to relieve? Specialist lawyers' perceptions of client involvement in legal service delivery

Michael Robertson; Lillian Catherine Corbin


Legal Ethics | 2005

Challenges in the Design of Legal Ethics Learning Systems: An Educational Perspective

Michael Robertson


Alternative Law Journal | 2001

Informed litigants with nowhere to go

Jeffrey Michael Giddings; Michael Robertson


Legal Ethics | 2009

Providing ethics learning opportunities throughout the legal curriculum

Michael Robertson


Legal Ethics | 2006

Grounding legal ethics learning in social scientific studies of lawyers at work

Michael Robertson; Kieran Mark Tranter


Griffith law review | 2002

‘Lay people, for God’s sake! Surely I should be dealing with lawyers?’: Towards an assessment of self-help legal services in Australia

Jeffrey Michael Giddings; Michael Robertson


Archive | 2011

The ethics project in legal education

Michael Robertson; Lillian Corbin; Kieran Mark Tranter; Francesca Bartlett


Archive | 2009

Maybe a solicitor needs to know that sort of thing but I don't: user perspectives on the utility of legal self-help resources

Merran Jane Lawler; Jeffrey Michael Giddings; Michael Robertson

Collaboration


Dive into the Michael Robertson's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Reid Mortensen

University of Southern Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge