Nyaaya
Mitra
Campus
Ambassadors
Volunteers
The legal sector lacks social intermediaries to help people navigate the law on the ground. Getting an FIR registered, visiting a government office, applying for social welfare are all actions that people often have to do by themselves. For those who don’t work in the legal industry, these can be daunting tasks.
What the law needs right now is the equivalent of ASHA workers, and at OutLawed India we believe that paralegals can help bridge that gap.
Our work with paralegals involves identifying and training law students, individuals from underserved communities, and social workers to provide first-point-of-contact legal aid. Through the use of accessible technology, those seeking assistance can easily request the services of paralegals based on a variety of factors like expertise, language, and region.
Paralegals do not require formal legal education, which opens up the job to sections of the society typically left out of the legal industry.
Nyaaya
Mitra
The legal sector lacks social intermediaries to help people navigate the law on the ground. Getting an FIR registered, visiting a government office, applying for social welfare are all actions that people often have to do by themselves. For those who don’t work in the legal industry, these can be daunting tasks.
What the law needs right now is the equivalent of ASHA workers, and at OutLawed India we believe that paralegals can help bridge that gap.
Our work with paralegals involves identifying and training law students, individuals from underserved communities, and social workers to provide first-point-of-contact legal aid. Through the use of accessible technology, those seeking assistance can easily request the services of paralegals based on a variety of factors like expertise, language, and region.
Paralegals do not require formal legal education, which opens up the job to sections of the society typically left out of the legal industry.
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Campus
Ambassadors
Volunteers
Testimonials
Madhav Manchanda
Volunteer from uttarakhand
"OutLawed India has empowered not only me but also numerous other students to contribute to legal literacy by spreading awareness, filing RTIs, and advocating for the rights of marginalized sections of society. Thanks to this program, I was able to conduct workshops and raise legal awareness in remote villages of Uttarakhand"
Tanya Ranjan
Volunteer from gujarat
"I spread awareness regarding IT laws, Children and Women welfare laws such as POSCO, 2012, POSH Act, 2013 and Protection of Women from domestic Violence, 2005. I realised there is a vast gap of laws which exist and the people’s knowledge about the law. To lessen this gap, I am a happy volunteer and I join programs and activities for the same. "
Press & Media
Enabling last mile justice delivery.
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