Edición QuebecDerecho civil · Barreau du Québec
Otras ediciones
Antigua y BarbudaArgentinaBahamasBarbadosBeliceBoliviaBrasilCanadáChileColombiaCosta RicaCubaDominicaRepública DominicanaEcuadorEl SalvadorGranadaGuatemalaGuyanaHaitíHondurasJamaicaMéxicoNicaraguaPanamáParaguayPerúSan Cristóbal y NievesSanta LucíaSan Vicente y las GranadinasSurinamTrinidad y TobagoEstados UnidosUruguayVenezuelaAlbaniaAndorraArmeniaAustriaAzerbaiyánBielorrusiaBélgicaBosnia y HerzegovinaBulgariaCroaciaChipreChequiaDinamarcaEstoniaFinlandiaFranciaGeorgiaAlemaniaGreciaHungríaIslandiaIrlandaItaliaKazajistánKosovoLetoniaLiechtensteinLituaniaLuxemburgoMaltaMoldaviaMónacoMontenegroPaíses BajosMacedonia del NorteNoruegaPoloniaPortugalRumaníaRusiaSan MarinoSerbiaEslovaquiaEsloveniaEspañaSueciaSuizaTurquíaUcraniaReino UnidoCiudad del VaticanoArgeliaAngolaBenínBotsuanaBurkina FasoBurundiCabo VerdeCamerúnRepública CentroafricanaChadComorasRepública del CongoRepública Democrática del CongoCosta de MarfilYibutiEgiptoGuinea EcuatorialEritreaEsuatiniEtiopíaGabónGambiaGhanaGuineaGuinea-BisáuKeniaLesotoLiberiaLibiaMadagascarMalauiMalíMauritaniaMauricioMarruecosMozambiqueNamibiaNígerNigeriaRuandaSanto Tomé y PríncipeSenegalSeychellesSierra LeonaSomaliaSudáfricaSudán del SurSudánTanzaniaTogoTúnezUgandaZambiaZimbabueAfganistánEmiratos Árabes UnidosBangladésBaréinButánBrunéiChinaIndonesiaIsraelIndiaIrakIránJordaniaJapónKirguistánCamboyaCorea del NorteCorea del SurKuwaitLaosLíbanoSri LankaMyanmarMongoliaMaldivasMalasiaNepalOmánFilipinasPakistánPalestinaCatarArabia SauditaSingapurSiriaTailandiaTayikistánTimor OrientalTurkmenistánTaiwánUzbekistánVietnamYemenAustraliaFiyiMicronesiaKiribatiIslas MarshallNauruNueva ZelandaPapúa Nueva GuineaPalaosIslas SalomónTongaTuvaluVanuatuSamoaAnguilaAntártidaSamoa AmericanaArubaÅlandSan BartoloméBermudasCaribe neerlandésIsla BouvetIslas CocosIslas CookCurazaoIsla de NavidadSáhara OccidentalIslas MalvinasIslas FeroeGuayana FrancesaGuernseyGibraltarGroenlandiaGuadalupeIslas Georgias del Sur y Sandwich del SurGuamHong KongIslas Heard y McDonaldIsla de ManTerritorio Británico del Océano ÍndicoJerseyIslas CaimánSan MartínMacaoIslas Marianas del NorteMartinicaMontserratNueva CaledoniaIsla NorfolkNiuePolinesia FrancesaSan Pedro y MiquelónIslas PitcairnPuerto RicoReuniónSanta ElenaSvalbard y Jan MayenSint MaartenIslas Turcas y CaicosTerritorios Australes FrancesesTokelauIslas Ultramarinas Menores de EE. UU.Islas Vírgenes BritánicasIslas Vírgenes de los EE. UU.Wallis y FutunaMayotte

El francés es el idioma oficial de Juge.ca. En caso de discrepancia, ambigüedad, omisión o conflicto de interpretación, prevalecerá la versión francesa.

Self-representation outcomesLegal workflow technology

What actually helps: support models for people without a lawyer

Juge.ca Research (Juge.ca)

Permalink: JUGE.2026.013 · Published 2026-06-19

A look at the supports that can steady a self-represented person, from self-help centres to unbundled services, without replacing a lawyer.

From good luck to guided

For a long time, the unofficial plan for people who could not afford a lawyer was simple: hand them the forms, wish them good luck, and hope for the best. That approach treats self-representation as a personal problem to be endured rather than a situation the system can help with. The result is predictable. People miss steps, misunderstand what is being asked of them, and arrive at hearings unsure of what to say or do.

Leaving people to navigate entirely alone is not only hard on them; it is also inefficient for everyone. Confused filings take longer to process, hearings run long when basic points have to be explained from scratch, and outcomes are weaker because the person could not participate effectively. Wasted effort on one side becomes wasted effort on the other.

There is a better middle ground between full representation and going it alone. A range of supports can meaningfully steady a self-represented person, giving them enough structure and guidance to take part in their own case with more confidence. None of these supports turn a layperson into a lawyer, and they are not meant to. Their job is to lower specific barriers so that ordinary people can use the justice system that is supposed to be theirs.

Models that work

Several support models have proven their worth. Courthouse self-help centres give people a place to ask questions, find the right forms, and understand basic procedure. Navigators and coaches walk alongside a litigant, helping them figure out what to do next without arguing the case for them. Duty counsel offer on-the-spot legal help at court for people who would otherwise have none.

Other models reach people in different ways. Plain-language guides translate dense procedure into instructions a non-lawyer can follow. Legal clinics provide focused advice and sometimes representation, often for specific communities or problem types. Unbundled, or limited-scope, services let a lawyer handle one defined part of a case, such as reviewing documents or preparing a person for a single appearance, while the client manages the rest.

Each of these lowers a specific barrier. A self-help centre addresses not knowing where to start; a navigator addresses feeling lost partway through; duty counsel addresses showing up with no advice at all; unbundling addresses not being able to afford a lawyer for the whole journey. Taken together, they form a spectrum that sits between full representation and going it completely alone, so that help can be matched to what a person actually needs.

The role of structure

One thread runs through the supports that help most: structure. Research connects structured help, such as checklists, organized chronologies, exhibit lists, and clear deadlines, to litigants who are more confident and better prepared. When a person can see the shape of their task laid out clearly, the work feels manageable rather than overwhelming.

Structure helps because it externalizes the knowledge that lawyers carry in their heads. A lawyer knows instinctively what documents matter, what order events should be told in, and when each step is due. A well-made checklist or template puts that same scaffolding in front of someone who has never done this before, so they are not relying on guesswork at every turn.

Structure is also exactly what well-designed tools can deliver at scale. A self-help centre can serve the people who walk through its doors, but a clear digital guide, a chronology builder, or a deadline tracker can reach far more people, at any hour, wherever they are. This is where thoughtful legal technology fits: not as a substitute for human help, but as a way to give many more people the organized starting point that makes participation possible.

What this is and is not

This is research and educational material on support models for self-represented people. It is general legal information, not legal advice, and it does not describe any individual's matter.

References

  1. Julie Macfarlane, NSRLP Final Report — recommendations and action steps (2013).
  2. Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System (IAALS), research on self-help and support models.
  3. OECD, “Toolkit for Access to Justice and People-Centred Justice Systems” — empowering people (2025).

Licence & attribution

Published under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0). Authors retain copyright. Reuse permitted with attribution.

Iniciar mi asunto