Access to Justice (ATJ) Web seeks to help guide the development of technology to help those in need. Through the ATJ Technology Principles we can use technology to give everyone fair access to the justice system a reality in Washington State and beyond.
APPLY the Principles in your project or organization
READ the ATJ Tech Principles.
READ the Supreme Court Order that upholds the Principles.
BROWSE resources that help uphold the principles.
Here is an interesting online readability tool. Not only does it give you
the scores, but it also suggests sentences that you should rewrite to
improve readability.
http://www.online-utility.org/english/readability_test_and_improve.jsp
Information about each of the scales is available at
Wkipedia's Readability article
Thanks to Kate Bladow from Probono Net.
A temporary copy of the Report is available at here:
http://BrianRowe.org/ATJWeb Final Report V3.doc
The report will be added to the resources page by September 25th.
Please feel free to contact us with any comments on the report.
If you have 30 seconds
Tell someone about ATJWeb.org
Link to ATJWeb.org
If you have 5 minutes
Speak Up. Send us a comment on the site, or send us content for the site.
If you have 15 minutes
Join In. add your expertise about the Principles
If you have 30 minutes
Add the RSS feed, comment on a resource or help write about examples of the Principles in action.
If you have an hour
Lend a Hand. By helping start the communities of practice. The next step in making the Principles a reality is creating a legal community that is aware of and connected to the Principles.
If you want to jump in the deep end
Contact us to work on a weekly or monthly project such as updating the RSS Feed, speaking in public about the Principles, or integrating them into a project you or your colleges are working on.
The digital divide is the chasm separating the haves and have-nots in digital technology. On one side are people who can afford or who have access to computers, a high-speed broadband connection and the plethora of services from online banking to social networking to blogging. On the other side of the equation are people who cannot afford the technology, cannot get broadband access because of their location, or who have learning or cultural limitations to using the technology.
There are many digital divides including:
Rural and urban
poor and rich
African-American and white
old and young
disabled and able
developing nation and developed nation
All these factors have been studied and solutions have been debated for years. In fact, Martin Luther King Jr. talked about such a divide in one of his last speeches four days before he died in 1968:
"There can be no gainsaying about the fact that a great revolution is taking place in the world today…That is, a technological revolution with the impact of automation and cybernation…Modern man through scientific genius has been able to dwarf distance. Through our genius we have made this world a neighborhood. And yet we we have not yet had the ethical commitment to make of it a brotherhood. But somehow, and in some way, we have got to do this."
Very few people remember a speech by President George W. Bush on March 26, 2004, in which he called for affordable broadband access for everyone. President Bush said.
“This country needs a national goal for the spread of broadband technology,... We ought to have universal affordable access for broadband technology by the year 2007 and then we ought to make sure, as soon as possible thereafter, consumers have choices when it comes to their carrier.”
As 2007 dawns, we obviously do not have universal affordable access to broadband, and consumers have little choice for providers outside of the duopoly of cable and telephone carriers.
Read more at:
http://www.pbs.org/mediashift/2007/01/digging_deeperyour_guide_to_th.htm...
[SOURCE: Media Shift, AUTHOR: Mark Glaser]