In this article

A research report by Justice Connect.

Online self-help resources can help people solve common legal issues independently. They are especially important for people who can’t afford a lawyer or access free public or community legal assistance. 

In Australia this group is often referred to as the ‘missing middle’. With an ever-growing number of people in this cohort, we have renamed it the ‘missing majority’. As the missing majority progressively adopts technology, there are increasing opportunities to find new models of providing cost-efficient and effective free legal assistance at scale. 

Justice Connect has already carried out user research on general interest in online resources, and a number of our projects provide service access points in online settings as well as static and interactive self-help resources. In this latest research, we were particularly interested in better understanding the opportunity to assist the missing majority through online resources. 

This research was funded by the Victorian Law Foundation to help better understand the attitudes and behaviours of people looking for and using legal self-help resources online to solve common civil law problems. Our aim is to inform better design and deployment of digital self-help resources across the legal services sector. 

The ​​Seeking Legal Help Online: Understanding the ‘missing majority’ report was designed in early 2020, then revised in response to the COVID-19 pandemic so that all research activities were carried out remotely in July and August 2020 with 15 participants from Victoria, Australia. We recruited participants from priority groups that are made vulnerable to legal problems and often assumed to have lower capability or limited access to online resources. This includes recent migrants, people living with a disability, single parents, and people living in a regional, rural or remote community. We learned from a diverse range of people about what they found useful in online resources to help them begin to resolve legal problems related to debt, work, housing, and accessing courts remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic.

decorative

This comprehensive human-centred report outlines the context, rationale, methodology and findings of this almost year-long research project. It describes the hypotheses, strategy, tactics and assumptions of the research design, as well as its outcomes in the form of insights, recommendations and design principles. These are illustrated with words and images directly from research participants. The quotes interspersed throughout this report ensure that readers never lose sight of the people at the heart of this project and ensure that the research participants’ thoughts, needs and experiences are presented in their own words. Visual diagrams, tables, illustrations and screenshots help to bring the research to life and provide specific examples of the methods used and actual experiences of people in these priority groups.   

The report also references other literature on legal self-help. While some of this project’s findings confirm those from similar research, the conclusions of this report also differ from existing research and assumptions. In particular, our research found that demographic features such as education level, language spoken, disability, location and migration status did not determine a person’s likelihood to use online legal resources. A key barrier to engagement isn’t capability, but rather poorly designed legal information. Other individual influences were a person’s level of legal knowledge gained through prior experience, as well as their sense of self-efficacy in resolving legal issues independently. e use of technology to support and scale-up their work, but funding for this investment is required.

decorative

To ensure the biggest impact, you need to involve the people who will be using a resource or tool in the initial design process. We shared our insights on designing this research project using best practice methodologies and working with communities.

This practical webinar covers:

  • How to set up an accessible, strength-based human-centred research project
  • Levels of partnership you could consider to support a research project
  • Tips and tricks for testing tools and connecting with communities in new ways.

Together, we can make access to justice a reality for everyone. Act now to give people who are struggling a brighter future.