Home > Useful stuff > Free legal information coming to Southern Africa

Free legal information coming to Southern Africa

November 29th, 2006 Leave a comment Go to comments

There is a pretty exciting project underway at the moment to aggregate case law and legislation published by Southern African courts and legislatures.  The organisation running this project is called the Southern African Legal Information Institute:

The Southern African Legal Information Institute (SAFLII) is a prototype system produced from data developed and published by the University of the Witswaterand Law School with assistance from the Australasian Legal Information Institute (AustLII).

The system is based on data collected by Wits Law School Editing and preparation of material for publication is by Wits Law School. Further mark-up processing, database structure, search engine facilities, and some other aspects of technical infrastructure are provided by AustLII. The Southern African parts of the WorldLII Catalog are jointly prepared by Wits Law School and AustLII. The overall SAFLII facility is managed jointly by Wits Law School and AustLII

There is a growing body of case law on the site already and this collection is set to grow considerably.  In time I hope to count this as one of my most comprehensive resources of case law.  For the time being only certain South African courts publish their judgments online.  A fair amount of legislation is available on the Web.  The holy grail is a comprehensive, free and complete database of case law and legislation.

Tags: , , ,

Related posts:

  1. Wealth of legal information available on the Web now, for free
  2. The end of legal publishers?
  3. Draft legislation intended to protect personal information in the works
  4. Is there a future for free legal content or am I being a hippy?
  5. Is there a future for free legal content or am I being a hippy?

Categories: Useful stuff Tags:
blog comments powered by Disqus