The recognition problem
Before anyone can use the justice system, they first have to realize that what they are facing is a legal matter at all. A landlord who refuses to make repairs, a benefit that gets cut off without explanation, a deposit that never comes back — these can feel like bad luck, a personal conflict, or just the way things are. They rarely arrive labelled as legal problems with names, rules, and possible remedies.
This recognition gap has consequences. If you do not see your situation as legal, you will not look for legal information, you will not consult a service, and you will not assert a right you may not know you have. The problem simply stays unresolved, or it gets worse, and the formal system never hears about it.
Recognition is shaped by experience and circumstance. People who have dealt with the system before, or who have someone in their network who has, are more likely to spot the legal angle. People facing several problems at once, or coping with stress and limited time, are less likely to. That is why naming a problem as legal is itself a skill worth building, not something we can assume people already have.
What legal capability means
Legal capability is the combination of knowledge, skills, and confidence that lets a person recognize a legal problem and do something useful about it. It includes being able to find reliable information, to understand the rights and options that apply, to take practical steps, and — importantly — to know when a problem is beyond self-help and it is time to get assistance.
The key word is capacity. Capability is not the same as having a stack of pamphlets or a bookmarked website. A person can have access to accurate material and still be unable to act on it, because acting requires judgement: which facts matter, what to do first, how to keep track of deadlines, and when to ask for help. Capability is what turns information into action.
Framing access to justice around capability changes what counts as a good outcome. Instead of asking only whether information exists, we ask whether people can actually use it to move their problem forward. That shift points toward supports that strengthen people, not just resources that sit on a shelf waiting to be found.
Beyond the pamphlet
Information on its own often fails the people who need it most. There can be too much of it, written in language that assumes legal training, or it arrives at the wrong moment — long before a person knew they had a problem, or long after the deadline that would have mattered. Volume is not the same as help.
What tends to work better is guidance that is structured and well timed: plain-language explanations, step-by-step pathways, and public legal education that meets people where they are. In Québec, organizations such as Éducaloi have built a body of clear, accessible material precisely to bridge the distance between the law as written and the law as ordinary people experience it.
Tools also matter. Resources that help a person organize their facts, understand their options, and take the next concrete step do more to build capability than information that only describes the law in the abstract. The goal is not just to inform but to enable — to leave the person better equipped to handle this problem and the next one.
What this is and is not
This is research and educational material on legal capability and public legal information. It is general legal information, not legal advice, and it does not describe any individual's matter.