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  1. Legal Aid Practice Standards Feb 17. [pdf, 526 KB]

    ...provide adequate back up in case of illness or other genuine unavailability. 2.11 Supervise adequately and have a plan for the review and supervision of any person undertaking legal aid work under their supervision. 2.12 Take care to maintain the privacy interests of people named in Court documents so that unintended parties do not obtain access to personal information. 5 General Responsibilities to Clients Legal Aid Funding 3. Where a client may be eligible for legal aid,...

  2. Compensation-for-a-Wrongly-Convicted-and-Imprisoned-Individual-FINAL.pdf [pdf, 1.4 MB]

    ...agreement in principle to compensate Mr- be proactively released, subject to any redactions as appropriate under the Officiailnformation Act 1982. I propose that Mr tft?ff!ff: name and identifying details be redacted in order to maintain his wish for privacy. Recommendations 59. The Minister of Justice recommends that Cabinet: SENSITIVE 2s369xiwkj 2022-09-01 15:57:57 9 1. note that on 6 September 2021, Cabinet: 1.1. agreed in principle to compensate Mr - for wrongful conviction and...

  3. [2023] NZIACDT 23 – ED v Dai (11 August 2023) [pdf, 245 KB]

    ...[142] The Tribunal has the power to order that any part of the evidence or the name of any witness not be published.33 It must balance the public interest in the transparency of the Tribunal and knowing of wrongdoing by licensed advisers with the privacy of the named individuals. [143] There is no public interest in knowing the name of Mr Dai’s client or her husband, or the identity of the unlicensed persons. [144] The Tribunal orders that no information identifying the compla...

  4. [2022] NZEnvC 135 Timu v Queenstown Lakes District Council [pdf, 4.9 MB]

    ...max. height of 1-1.5m informal belt of trees 4-6m tall or higher, comprising South Island Kowhai, Kanuka, Olearia hectorii, Olearia fragrantissima, Pittosporum tenuifolium and Acacia pravissima to screen new dwelling and curtilage and provide mutual privacy new naturalistic mound (.6 to 1m high) reflecting old river channel pattern and planted with kanuka, olearia, kowhai and cabbage trees existing fill reshaped into sinuous mound up to 1.2m high to north of proposed Building Platfo...

  5. SOI_2023-2027_v27-PRINT.pdf [pdf, 1.5 MB]

    ...the day • ensure proposed legislation meets the requirements of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990, and advise the Attorney- General whether Bills are consistent with the Act • monitor and support independent crown entities, such as the Privacy Commissioner and the Human Rights Commission to uphold human rights • monitor the Electoral Commission to support its delivery of elections. Supporting an independent judiciary The Judiciary is responsible for the independent exer...

  6. LCRO 127/2017 EZ v UO [pdf, 265 KB]

    ...13 [Company B] v EZ HC Auckland [citation removed], 18 May 2015 at [8] (emphasis in original). 14 [Company B] v EZ HC Auckland [citation removed, 12 June 2015 at [2]. 14 entitlement to copies under the Privacy Act. If there are ongoing delays on Mr UO’s part, he can expect the matter to be referred to the Law Society. [78] The court then turned its attention to costs. Costs of $6,868 were awarded in favour of the plaintiff, with the provi

  7. Proposals against incitement of hatred and discrimination - discussion document - Indonesian [pdf, 325 KB]

    ...sampaikan secara jelas beserta alasan Anda. Contohnya, Anda mungkin menginginkan sebagian informasi dirahasiakan karena merupakan informasi pribadi yang sensitif. Kementerian Hukum akan mempertimbangkan pendapat Anda saat menanggapi permintaan tersebut. Privacy Act (Undang-Undang Privasi) 2020 mengatur cara Kementerian mengumpulkan, menyimpan, menggunakan, dan membuka informasi pribadi Anda dan informasi yang Anda berikan. Anda berhak mengakses dan mengoreksi informasi pribadi. Kemente...

  8. [2022] NZEmpC 48 E Tu Inc v Mount Cook Airline Ltd [pdf, 314 KB]

    ...was needed by a resident, could not drink alcohol, could not have visitors without prior permission and was not to disturb the residents during the night. During the sleepover he could only engage in a limited range of other activities and his privacy was limited. The Court considered that those constraints pointed towards the sleepover being work. [23] The other two factors assessed by the Court also supported the conclusion that the sleepover was work. The Court considered that...

  9. Legal Aid Practice Standards [pdf, 487 KB]

    ...provide adequate back up in case of illness or other genuine unavailability. 2.11 Supervise adequately and have a plan for the review and supervision of any person undertaking legal aid work under their supervision. 2.12 Take care to maintain the privacy interests of people named in Court documents so that unintended parties do not obtain access to personal information. 5 General Responsibilities to Clients Legal Aid Funding 3. Where a client may be eligible for legal aid,...

  10. Evaluation of Victim Support Services [pdf, 810 KB]

    ...Service users spoke positively about their first contact with the service and found support workers highly responsive, calmly supportive, and consistent. • Victims who decline the service said they had other sources of support, felt a sense of privacy or shame, or felt sufficiently resilient. 2.2 Intervention logic model Following a workshop with Victim Support staff, Ministry of Justice staff and Police, the evaluators developed a logic model for Victim Support services (see app...