This is a summary of a project I discussed at the 2011 Students for Free
Culture Unconference. I'd like to thank SFC for putting the conference
together, and for inviting me to publish this post on their blog.

![][1]

> [![Venn: Law + People = Justice][2]][3]

>

> No society that kept its laws secret could ever be called free. No
government that hid its regulations from the regulated could ever stand
in our tradition. Law controls. But it does so justly only when visibly.
And law is visible only when its terms are knowable and controllable by
those it regulates. . . .

-Lawrence Lessig, Introduction to Richard Stallman's _Free Software,
Free Society_.

More must be done to increase the availability, and the visibility, of
justice.

Whatever more is, I decided to be one of the people doing it. That
decision is behind both my application to the David A. Clarke School of
Law (DCSL) and my insistence on the creation of an Illustrated Law
Journal (ILJ) while there. My passion for the idea of collecting,
editing, and publishing visual illustrations of laws and legal concepts
stems from the beliefs articulated in the following stanza from DCSL
founders Edgar and Jean Camper Cahn's Credo, _This I Believe_, that
informs DCSL's mission.

> And I believe the day will come when the monopoly

>           over law and legal knowledge -- the lawyers' monopoly

>           the law schools' monopoly -- will be broken

>     When men and women and yes, even children will know that which

>           is expected of them and that which they can expect of
others:

>                 to refrain from harm

>                 to honor their word

>                 to respect the dreams of others and the right of
others

>                      to dream in their own way

>                                                This I believe

The opportunity to know what is expected of you, and what you should
expect of others should not require a law degree. We can make the text
of laws more freely available to people distributionally, but until
those laws are also available conceptually, there's room for injustice
in impenetrably worded, opaque laws.

#### What is it?

A periodic online and print journal - each issue covering a single legal
topic - that will help jurists understand their work, and interested
laypeople understand the laws that affect them.

#### What sorts of things will go in?

It could be anything that clearly illustrates a law or legal concept.
Some of the things I expect we'll publish are venn diagrams, flow
charts, cartoons, and street sign type images.

#### What does the Journal Need? (non-exhaustive)

  * A website where the editorial process can take place.

  * Illustrations and ideas for illustrations of laws and legal
concepts.

  * While we do have several ideas for topic areas, we'd love to have
more, especially from non-jurists

#### Where can I learn more and contribute?

The ILJ has a google group [here][4], documents [here][5] and an
Identi.ca group at ![ILJ][6].

   [1]: http://freeculture.org/feed/simple.png

   [2]: http://freeculture.org/files/2011/02/simple-300x242.png

   [3]: http://freeculture.org/files/2011/02/simple.png

   [4]: http://groups.google.com/group/visual-law/

   [5]:
https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=explorer&chrome=true&srcid=0Bz8P-
XbtNJzhNWQ2Y2VmOGYtZjg0My00NjEzLTlmNjctMzhlYmQ3MTNkOTI2&hl=en&authkey=CJ
vsh6sD

   [6]: http://identi.ca/group/ilj

URL: http://freeculture.org/blog/2011/02/28/the-illustrated-law-journal/
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