Access to Justice: Can Common People Really Reach the Courts?
Lesson 2
Access to Justice: Can Common People Really Reach the Courts?
Access to justice is one of the most important promises of the Indian Constitution. It means that every person, rich or poor, powerful or weak, should be able to approach the courts for protection of their rights.
In reality, reaching the court is not easy for common people.
For many citizens, the word “court” itself creates fear. Legal language is difficult. Court procedures are long. Lawyers are expensive. Dates are uncertain. Because of this, many people give up even before starting their legal journey.
Justice on Paper vs Justice in Life
Indian law clearly says that everyone is equal before the law. Article 14 of the Constitution guarantees equality. Article 21 protects life and personal liberty.
But equality on paper does not always become equality in real life.
A daily wage worker loses income on every court date.
A poor family cannot afford repeated legal expenses.
A common citizen does not understand legal procedures easily.
As a result, justice becomes slow and distant for them.
Procedural Barriers
Legal procedures are meant to protect fairness, but sometimes they become barriers:
Long delays
Repeated adjournments
Complex paperwork
Lack of legal awareness
For powerful people, these delays are manageable.
For weak people, these delays become punishment.
Free Legal Aid: Hope with Limitations
The law provides free legal aid to poor and needy persons. Legal Services Authorities exist to help them.
However, many people are not aware of this right. In some cases, legal aid remains only a formality. The intention of the system is good, but implementation needs improvement.
A Law Student’s Understanding
As a law student, this lesson teaches that access to justice is not only about courts being open. It is about justice being affordable, understandable, and timely.
True justice begins when a common person can approach the court without fear.
“Justice is meaningful only when it is reachable.”
This lesson prepares the ground to understand how delay, poverty, and power affect the justice system.
🔹 Chapter-wise Legal Mapping (Add-On)
Constitutional Provisions
Article 14 – Equality before law
Article 21 – Right to life and personal liberty
Legal Principles
Access to Justice
Rule of Law
Fair Procedure
Practical Issues
Delay in courts
Financial burden on common people
Lack of legal awareness
© Copyright & Disclaimer (Lesson 2)
© Author: Raj Kr Sharma
Law Student, Patna Law College
This lesson and its content are protected under copyright law.
No part of this material may be copied, reproduced, stored, published, or used for commercial purposes without prior written permission of the author.
This content is written for educational and academic purposes only.
It does not constitute legal advice or professional legal opinion.
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