Justice Gap Research
The 成人抖阴 (LSC) conducts research measuring the "justice gap" - the gap between the need for civil legal assistance among low-income Americans and the resources available to meet that need.
Introduction
LSC鈥檚 Justice Gap Research advances our commitment to funding civil legal assistance for Americans who would be otherwise unable to afford it. Our research provides high-quality data about the gap between the need for civil legal assistance and its availability in low-income America, used to advance LSC鈥檚 advocacy efforts.
To date, LSC has published four studies documenting the justice gap as part of its Justice Gap Initiatives.
The was published in 2005 and showed that for every person helped by LSC-funded organizations, another was turned away because they did not have sufficient resources to help. The , published in 2009 using the same methodology as the 2005 study, confirmed that the justice gap among low-income Americans remained just as large as it had been in 2005.
In 2017, LSC released a third, comprehensive, Justice Gap study entitled: 鈥.鈥 For the 2017 report, LSC developed a more expansive methodology that included a national survey of low-income households administered by NORC at the University of Chicago. The report revealed that, in the prior year, 86% of the civil legal problems reported by low-income Americans did not receive any or enough legal help.
The 2017 Justice Gap Study also found that 71% of low-income households in the country had experienced at least one civil legal problem in the prior year. One in four low-income households experienced six or more civil legal problems, including 67% of households with survivors of domestic violence or sexual abuse. These problems included critical issues such as veterans鈥 benefits, domestic violence, disability access, poor housing conditions, debt issues and health.
In April 2022, LSC released its fourth Justice Gap study, 鈥.鈥 For the 2022 study, LSC once again partnered with NORC at the University of Chicago, surveying more than 5,000 American households of all income levels to provide an up-do-date baseline measure of civil legal need and insights into help-seeking behaviors of people facing civil legal problems, like eviction, foreclosure, domestic violence, and child custody disputes. The survey also asked about the impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on American families. Additionally, LSC grantees tracked all the people who came to them for help and how many were turned away.
The 2022 study revealed that 92% of the civil legal problems of low-income Americans did not receive any or enough legal help. Nearly three quarters (74%) of low-income households experienced at least one civil legal problem in the previous year. A third (33%) of low-income Americans had at least one problem they attributed to the COVID-19 Pandemic.