Public Understanding of Law Survey (PULS) Volume 2: understanding and capability
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| Public Understanding of Law Survey (PULS) Volume 2: understanding and capability | 5.53 MB |
The findings in this volume build on those reported in Volume 1. This world-first report on legal capability provides a starting point to better understand what is needed for people to achieve fair outcomes for issues in our lives which might have a legal solution, what are known as justiciable problems.
In this volume, the authors introduce the concept of legal capability and report on levels of:
- understanding of rights and responsibilities
- confidence in being able to get fair resolution of justiciable problems
- practical legal literacy relating to the ability to obtain, understand and navigate information and services needed to deal with everyday justiciable problems
- perceptions of the relevance of law and how people see it in their everyday lives
- perceptions of the accessibility of lawyers
- trust in lawyers
- digital capability for legal type tasks.
The Public Understanding of Law Survey (PULS) is the most significant effort to quantify legal capability to date and provides unprecedented insight into levels and patterns in Victoria, and importantly the relationships between the various aspects of legal capability. The relationships and dependencies will be further explored in Volume 3 of the PULS.