Strengthening Legal Aid Capacity in India

GS2 – Polity

Context:

Despite the constitutional mandate under Article 39A to ensure equal justice through free legal aid, India’s legal aid framework remains under-resourced, hindering equitable access to justice.

Constitutional and Legal Framework
  • Article 39A (DPSP): Directs the State to provide free legal aid to promote justice on the basis of equal opportunity.
  • Statutory Backing: The Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987, institutionalized the delivery of legal aid.
Legal Aid Infrastructure
  • Three-Tier System:
    • NALSA (National Level): Apex legal services body.
    • SLSAs (State Level) and DLSAs (District Level): Implement programs at sub-national levels.
  • Delivery Mechanism: Legal aid is extended through empanelled lawyers and trained paralegal volunteers (PLVs).
  • Funding: Jointly funded by the Centre and States; NALSA distributes grants to SLSAs.
Major Challenges

Fiscal and Administrative Constraints

  • Negligible Funding: Legal aid receives <1% of the total justice system budget.
  • Underutilisation: Many SLSAs spent <50% of their allocated funds.
  • Lack of Autonomy: SLSAs need NALSA’s approval for staffing, purchases, and compensation payments.
  • Rigid Budgets: Fixed ceilings limit flexibility in reallocating resources for emerging needs.

Operational Bottlenecks

  • Declining Volunteer Base: PLVs dropped by 38% between 2019 and 2024.
  • Inadequate Compensation: Substandard wages make it difficult to retain qualified personnel.
  • Poor Reach: Legal aid clinics cover only 1 in 127–163 villages.
  • Low Deployment: Just one-third of available PLVs are actively working.
Way Forward
  • Enhanced Budgeting: Increase legal aid allocation to at least 2% of the justice budget with direct transfers to SLSAs.
  • Decentralised Operations: Empower SLSAs with fund autonomy and recruitment powers.
  • PLV Support: Ensure fair remuneration, social protection, and proportional deployment based on population density.
  • Tech-Driven Outreach: Expand mobile legal clinics and integrate digital grievance redress systems for remote areas.
Positive Developments
  • Increased Legal Aid Access: Over 15 lakh beneficiaries in 2023–24, a 28% rise over the previous year.
  • Budget Expansion: Legal aid funds reached ₹1,090 crore across 25 states by 2022.
  • Proactive States: 13 states have doubled their legal aid budgets since 2019.
  • Spending Increase: Per capita spending rose from ₹3 to ₹7 post-2019.
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