Strengthening Legal Aid Mechanism in India

Syllabus: Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population

What is Legal Aid?

  • Legal aid means free legal assistance to people unable to afford lawyers.
  • Institutionalised through the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987 (implemented in 1995).
  • Guided by Article 39A, ensuring no person is denied justice due to social or economic disadvantage.
  • Aims to provide accessible, affordable and inclusive legal services for all citizens.

Key Features

  • Free legal representation, mediation and counselling for EWS and marginalized groups.
  • Services delivered through NALSA, State and District Legal Services Authorities (DLSA).
  • Digital platforms like Tele-Law and Nyaya Bandhu provide remote legal access.
  • Legal literacy drives conducted through law universities, NGOs and paralegal volunteers.

Need for a Strong Legal Aid System

  • Nearly 70% of India’s population is rural, where legal infrastructure is limited.
  • India has over 4.5 crore pending cases, causing justice delays.
  • 80% of undertrial prisoners are from weaker economic backgrounds.
  • Only 1 in 5 eligible citizens is aware of free legal aid (NALSA 2024).
  • Enforcing Article 39A strengthens social, economic and political justice.

Government Initiatives

  • NALSA + DLSA: Handled 8 lakh cases in last three years.
  • Tele-Law: Available at 1.3 lakh Common Service Centres, with 45 lakh consultations.
  • Nyaya Bandhu: Connects 11,000+ pro bono lawyers with low-income litigants.
  • Mediation Act 2023 targets resolving 70% of family and civil disputes outside courts.
  • 80,000+ judgments translated into 18 languages under e-Courts project.

Challenges

  • Low awareness among rural population regarding free legal aid rights.
  • Insufficient training for legal aid lawyers affects service quality.
  • Infrastructure gaps in district legal aid clinics and mediation centres.
  • Digital divide limits accessibility to online legal services.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen NALSA with 25% higher funding and skilled paralegal teams.
  • Mandate professional certification and continuous training for legal aid lawyers.
  • Expand AI-based legal tools, e-filing, mobile legal clinics, and awareness programs.

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