Legal Resources

Find websites and materials written in plain language.

Logo features a scale of justice and a book with the acronym "LSLAP" in white on a blue gradient background.

LSLAP Manual: Public Complaint Procedures

Law Students’ Legal Advice Program (LSLAP)
This chapter on administrative law is used by law students handling cases at LSLAP’s legal clinics. It’s an overview of citizens’ rights, including the right to vote, and sets out the legal avenues available to individuals who believe that a government agency has acted improperly.
Last reviewed September 2024
Logo features a dove in a circle outlined with a chain, with one link broken. The organization name is to the right.

Booklets for People in Provincial Prisons

Prisoners’ Legal Services
Various booklets explain your rights and the programs available to you as a person in provincial custody.
Last reviewed August 2024
Logo features two rainbow-coloured arcs forming a left-pointing arrow, and the organization name.

Know Your Rights: A Toolkit for 2SLGBTQIA+ Folks in Navigating Youth, Healthcare and Criminal Justice Issues

Kamloops Pride
This online toolkit is a compilation of questions and answers around issues affecting 2SLGBTQIA+ folks. The content is divided into sections on criminal justice, health care, youth health care, and youth. The appendixes include definitions, resources, human right complaints, BC Corrections, and forms.
Last reviewed August 2024
Logo with six rectangles and a circle in six bright colours to represent people, and "People's Law School."

Mental Health and Discrimination

People’s Law School
The law helps protect anyone with a mental disability from discrimination. Learn what amounts to discrimination based on a mental disability, and the steps to take if you’re discriminated against.
Last reviewed July 2024
Logo with six rectangles and a circle in six bright colours to represent people, and "People's Law School."

Discrimination in Accessing Health Care

People’s Law School
The law protects you from discrimination when you access health care services. Learn to identify discrimination, and steps to take if you’re discriminated against.
Last reviewed July 2024
Logo with six rectangles and a circle in six bright colours to represent people, and "People's Law School."

Dial-a-Law: Children and Consent to Health Care

People’s Law School
In BC, a child under age 19 may consent to their own health care, if the child is capable. Learn what this means and other issues of health care consent.
Last reviewed July 2024
Logo featuring the letters FIPA, the words "your data your rights" and small coloured squares representing pixels.

Privacy and Access to Information

Freedom of Information and Privacy Association (FIPA)
This website provides resources about privacy and access to information laws, your rights, and how to exercise your rights. Topics include your health information, your rights to access the personal information public and private bodies hold about you, and your rights to access general information that public bodies hold about you.
Last reviewed July 2024
First page of fact sheet with text in two columns.

Medical Assistance in Dying — Fact Sheet

Nidus Registry
Explains MAiD and who is eligible, who can provide MAiD, what happens if you are mentally incapable or if you cannot physically sign, who can witness a MAiD request, the cost, where you get forms, what to do if you are refused, if you can refuse health care, if you have to request MAiD at end-of-life, and resources from Nidus.
Last reviewed March 2024
Logo features the word “PIVOT” in black other than the V, which is red. Under this are the words “legal society.”

Methadone Rights Cards

Pivot Legal Society
In cooperation with BC Association of People on Methadone, Pivot has produced 15,000 methadone patient’s rights cards. Faced with systemic abuse and discrimination from unethical physicians, pharmacists, and others, methadone patients across the province are standing up for their rights.
Last reviewed March 2024
Logo with six rectangles and a circle in six bright colours to represent people, and "People's Law School."

Dial-a-Law: Rights at Work

People’s Law School
Guides that can help you understand your rights in the workplace, and how to protect them.
Last reviewed March 2024