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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 p...

At the Doorstep of the Court – Law and the Common Man

 This website is based on the book “Ek Adalat Aisa Bhi” Author: Raj Kr Sharma Lesson 1 At the Doorstep of the Court: Law and the Common Man A court is not just a building. For a common person, it is the last place of hope. When every other system fails, a person finally turns towards the court, believing that here, at least, his voice will be heard. But reaching the doorstep of the court is never easy. For an ordinary citizen, the word court itself creates fear and confusion. Dates, lawyers, documents, legal language, and long procedures make the journey difficult. Still, this very system claims to protect the rights of the weakest person. Law and Hope The purpose of law is not only to punish. The real aim of law is balance — between the individual and the State, between power and justice, between rights and duties. When a common person enters a court, he does not carry only a case file. He carries his pain, his trust, and his last hope. Every court order is not just a written dec...