Why family law
If you want to understand self-representation, family law is where to look first. Family disputes are the single largest source of self-represented litigants. In the National Self-Represented Litigants Project study, about 60 percent of self-represented litigants were in family matters, which puts the field at the heart of the access-to-justice conversation.
The reason is partly about money and timing. Separation and divorce strain household finances at exactly the moment legal help is needed. A couple that managed comfortably together suddenly has to run two households on the same income, and a lawyer's fees land at the very point when each person feels least able to pay them.
So people who never imagined representing themselves find themselves doing precisely that. They are not necessarily the people the system pictures when it designs its forms and procedures, yet they make up a large share of those who use the family courts. Recognizing how common this is changes how we should think about designing the system around them.
High stakes, high volume
Family cases carry unusually high stakes. The outcomes touch children, housing, and income, the most fundamental parts of a person's life. A decision about parenting time or support is not an abstract legal question; it shapes where children sleep, who they see, and how a family makes ends meet.
On top of that, emotions run high. Family disputes arrive wrapped in grief, anger, and fear, which makes it harder for people to think clearly about procedure or to negotiate calmly. The same person who could handle a routine matter dispassionately may struggle when the dispute is with a former partner about their own children.
And the volume is large. Family courts handle a great many cases, which is part of why the IAALS Cases Without Counsel study focused on U.S. family courts in the first place. High stakes, high emotion, and high volume combine to make family law the access-to-justice frontline, the place where the gap between what people need and what they can get is felt most acutely.
What helps families
Several kinds of support can ease the burden on families. Plain-language guides help people understand what the process asks of them without needing a law degree to decode it. Parenting-plan templates give separating parents a structured way to work through arrangements for their children, turning a daunting blank page into a series of manageable decisions.
Resolution options outside a full hearing also matter. Mediation and other dispute-resolution processes can let families reach agreements with less conflict, less cost, and more control over the outcome than a contested trial. Navigators can guide people through the steps and point them toward the right resource at the right time.
Tools that organize the practical details round out the picture. Family cases often turn on finances and timelines, and software that helps a person assemble income information, track expenses, and lay out a clear chronology can reduce conflict and improve preparation. When the practical groundwork is in order, families can focus their energy on the decisions that actually matter for their children and their future.
What this is and is not
This is research and educational material on self-representation in family law. It is general legal information, not legal advice, and it does not describe any individual's matter.