Margaret Hagan of Stanford University has posted Access to Justice Design Sprint , at the Program for Legal Tech + Design .
Here are excerpts from the post:
Are you a User Experience or Interface designer with an interest in public service? Do you want to use your design skills to help millions of Californians get better access to legal help? [...]
Stanford Law School & d.school are holding an Access to Justice Design Sprint — to redesign the California Courts’ official website that provides self-help resources to any Californian who wants to understand & resolve their legal problems. The website has millions of visitors every year, searching for help with their legal challenges. The Court’s staff & IT team are partnering with us to redesign how their large collection of self-help resources can be designed for more people to access, in a more user-friendly & engaging way.
We invite you to apply to join the working group of designers & legal experts that will develop new designs for the site. If you are not located in the Bay Area, we still invite you to apply to work with us remotely. [...]
To apply or for more information, please see the complete post.
Filed under: Applications, Projects Tagged: California courts, California judiciary, Court information systems, Court Websites, Design of legal information systems, Design of self-help legal resources, Judicial information systems, Legal design, Legal information design, Legal information resources for self-represented litigants, Legal information services for self-represented litigants, Margaret Hagan, Program for Legal Technology and Design, Self-help legal resources
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