Categories
Ideabook Integration into Community

Access by Design concept: a resource-rich legal smartphone

During the Legal Design Bootcamp that I was running last week, one of the participating groups came up with a very interesting concept that I wanted to share.

We spent one day going through a design cycle, and they began by choosing a very particular user — a young Guatemalan girl, aged around 16 year old, who ends up in California after having journeyed across land, via Coyote, and is now going through immigration proceedings.

The team explored many different directions about designs to serve this girl — including lowering hurdles inside the legal system that she needs to pass through, having Walmart-style greeters welcome her whenever she comes into the court, drastically simplifying the forms she needs to fill out, and more. They arrived on one idea that had particular promise & began to develop it out.

Their insight: rather than put the burden on her to gather & coordinate all the possible legal services, plus social services, plus logistics to transition to life in the US, what about doing this gathering & coordinating for her? How could we provide her not just with a suite of resources, but with a way for her to easily & intuitively access these resources, without having to seek them out or coordinate them herself?

Access by Design - pre programmed smartphone

The design: give her a smartphone that is pre-popluated with a suite of resources, connections, and welcome messages that will be a smarter, more interactive version of a Welcome Packet. What tools could this smartphone have pre-programmed on it?
  • case tracker, to watch how her legal petitions are going through the courts
  • directions and guides to the court house
  • a calendar that is loaded with upcoming appointments (and which can be updated)
  • a contact book full of people she can reach out to
  • a transit app that lets her get transit as needed
  • a video-chat check-in tool
This design is inspired in part by a new program launched by Community Technology Alliance (with participation from Google), in San Jose, California, in which homeless residents of the city are given phones that are pre-loaded with resources they can use — and even more importantly, perhaps, that give these residents a contact number they can give to potential employers and contacts, to begin to transition to employment.
Categories
Ideabook Training and Info

Board Game guide for learning the law and thinking it through

Legal Design Projects - title cards - games of legal processes

Can we make navigators that are game-like, or make games that allow a person to do a prep-run of what an actual legal procedure will be like?

This concept came out of a workshop on improving immigration support. It was for a board game that a group could play together, to learn the scenarios and pathways of immigration law.

It would be a jumpoff point for questioning more about law, and thinking through how immigration rules could apply to him.

Categories
Ideabook Triage and Diagnosis

Story-based intake

Legal Design Projects - title cards - visual stories

An idea for gathering intake information & triage-ing users to the right legal resource by giving them video scenarios/stories to watch and then figure out which best corresponds to their situation.

Categories
Ideabook Procedural Guide

Interactive Legal Maps

Open Law Lab - Visual Law - Interactive Legal Maps

I’ve been prototyping various means to deliver & build legal knowledge — with a specific consideration of bolstering Access to Justice. One pathway, of course, is Visualized Law.

I’ve been playing with it with cartoons and illustrations, and in other forms (hyperlinked, layered checklists — visual expert systems).

One promising prototype is the Visual Mind Map, that is hyperlinked & lively with images, videos, & other cues that can guide the user through. The promise of such a map is that it lets the user locate themselves in a specific cluster of resources within a broader field of information. They can see the broad scope of the area they are in, while still focusing in on what precise information they need to retrieve & actions they need to pursue.

What would such an interactive legal mind map look like in practice? See this embedded Popplet for a first generation play with this format. I’ve used Popplets a lot for my own brainstorming, paper-writing, research, and collaborations with teams. I know there is great potential in scoping out a version of such a mind-mapping specifically for legal resources.

I see a future mash-up of interactive mind map diagrams with a curated, semi-open wiki format. I would love all the legal knowledge and advice out there on a specific legal problem to be extracted out of forums, pamphlets, q-and-as, blog posts, news articles, and other random clips of text around the web — and diagrammed out clearly & visually (if not beautifully too).

I can understand legal topics better when they are composed on the page in a meaningful way, and my guess is that most people with legal problems who are searching around the Internet would also benefit from a Legal Map to ground them & guide them. No more blocks of text!

Another kind of navigator, that shows you how to get from point A to point B, from problem to resolution — this one came out of our immigration hackathon.

Legal Design Projects - title cards-12 - interactive legal map

Categories
Ideabook Procedural Guide

Smart checklist and timeline guides

Legal Design Projects - title cards-11 - smart checklist and timelien
An idea to help lay people go through legal processes by giving them interactive and customized guides to going through them step by step.

It is a website that gives a serialized set of prompts and information. We have made a first version of this as Navocado.

Categories
Ideabook Triage and Diagnosis

National ad campaign for legal services

National Legal Services Advertisement campaign

Could we use the same methods of those television lawyers who bombard daytime-tv-watchers with ‘Are you injured? Can you sue? Call now to find your rights!’ — to increase lay people’s awareness of their rights, of civil remedies, of free or low-cost legal services?

Categories
Current Projects Hearings

Youth courts, for kids & run by kids

On Friday July 24th, 2015 the Bay Area NPR-affiliate, KQED, reported on a local juvenile court that takes a unique user-oriented approach to justice.

Matthew Green’s report Inside Oakland’s Youth Court, Where Kids Call the Shots describes the Centerforce Youth Court, that takes on offenders who are juveniles with first-time misdemeanors. Most everyone working in the court are also juveniles — including the jurors judging the offender, the attorneys prosecuting and defending her, and the bailiffs and clerks ensuring the court operates correctly. The only non-juvenile is the judge.

The overarching goal of the program is to reduce recidivism, promote restorative justice, and reduce the mainstream court’s caseloads by redirecting these types of juvenile cases to this special design — which promote more community involvement and workshops.

This style of youth court exists throughout the US, with more than 1000 nationwide and some 120 in California.

What would other radically redesigned court systems look like — particularly ones that take the peer-to-peer model to heart? Could other specific types of cases be siphoned off the mainstream criminal/civil systems into courtrooms & organizations designed to be more community-oriented, rehabilitative, and understanding from the lay-person’s perspective?

On a recent evening, kids waited nervously in the hallway for their trials to begin. The court serves about 120 offenders each year, usually referred by police or school officials. To participate, offenders have to first confess to their crimes.

The docket was full that night – cases ranging from vandalism and minor drug possession to theft — as in the case of one shy young lady named Preva, who stole some makeup before a piano recital.

“Preva wanted this night to be perfect, every little thing, so she went to a store and stole some makeup,” Gabrielle Battle, a petite 13-year-old serving as Preva’s attorney, tells the jury.

“She was blinded by the idea of perfection and looking perfect for her big night.  … I will prove to you, the jury, that Preva was just a young kid making a mistake, and she is sorry for what she did.”

Following opening statements, the jurors ask the defendant questions and then  deliberate. Decisions are legally binding: If defendants complete the sentences, their records are closed, as if the crime never happened.

“At the end of the day, their record is closed to the public,” explains Angela Adams, the court’s program coordinator. “On some job applications, there’s a form  where they check off the box, ‘Have you ever committed a crime?’ and they’re able to check the box that says ‘no.’ ”

….

“When you come here, you actually get to, like, go to workshops, do community service, do things that can actually give back to the community,” says Akili Moree, another feisty 13-year-old who joined the program voluntarily last year and works the courtroom like a mini Perry Mason. “And you can learn from your mistakes, instead of just receiving a punishment that you’ll really get nothing out of.”

For Michaela Wright, things ended much better than she expected. The jury gave her 12 hours of community service, three workshops and two jury duties. She plans to start college this fall, with a clean record.

Wright says she appreciates that the process wasn’t just focused on punishment, and wishes she could say the same for her parents, who were none too pleased about her arrest.

When asked if she got in trouble at home after her arrest, she simply replied:

“Oh, yeah … oh, yeah.”

Read the full story here at KQED’s site.

 

Categories
Ideabook Integration into Community

Public Space Law

Public Space Law

Could we put law on the street? Have public space installations that give basic outreach, checklists, resources, if not even full-blown clinics for people to encounter in their daily life?

This idea is in part from conversations with my Mexican colleagues, with ideas for subway station legal clinics.

Categories
Current Projects

Designing a Usable Online Privacy tool

I am working with a team at Carnegie Mellon to create more Usable Privacy Policies. One of the main deliverables we’re creating is a plugin for web browsers, that shows the user information about the site that they’re on. The goal is to present information about the site’s legal and privacy policies in compelling ways, so the person visiting the site will be a more critical consumer of it.

The plugin would be an intervention just-in-time, as the user has arrived on a site & is assessing whether she wants to stay there, explore it some more, or give it her usage data if not also subscription. How do we help her be smart about whether she wants to use that site & accept its privacy practices?

Privacy Policy design  user journey

Back in May, I worked with one other leader of this project, Pedro Leon who is a fellow at Stanford Law School’s Center on Internet & Society, did a design sprint to create sketchy mock-ups of what some different browser plugins might look like. Our goal was to create paper mock-ups of possible browser interfaces, that we could do some quick testing with on that day, and then refine them into proper digital mockups to test in focus groups and online.

Usable Privacy policy - workshop work

We tried to capture a range of different messages, compositions, moods, and hierarchies. For our first round of designs, our concepts ranged from the hyper-complex to the hyper-simple. Our main line of variables was along how much information we presented.

User Interface for Privacy Policy spectrum - variables from super clean to hyper detailed

We also were cognizant of possible variations in elements & composition that we could use in putting together possible plugins.

User Privacy Plugin design variables

And we also drew on some other inspiration & analogies for how we could present information like privacy ratings.

Usable Privacy Policies - plugin inspiration - Screen Shot 2015-05-11 at 6.03.43 PM Usable Privacy Policies - plugin inspiration - Screen Shot 2015-05-11 at 6.02.56 PM Usable Privacy Policies - plugin inspiration - Screen Shot 2015-05-11 at 6.02.46 PM Energy Label rating display

Mock-ups of possible privacy plug-in interfaces

Along the axis of simple to complex information, we created some very raw sketches of what a plug-in interface could look like.

Here’s the most simple: a single grade and some links to see what this grade actually looks like:

Usable Privacy Policy design project - IMG_20150512_143251.767

We didn’t necessarily think this super-simple grade would actually be the most effective or user-friendly interface, but our goal was to stretch our own imagination about what’s possible and divine the right amount of simplicity-information balance.

A slightly more complex interface (but still on the simple end of the spectrum) is a letter-score plus some more, very simplified markers of a score — emoji faces, a text description, or something that gives a very glanceable impression of ‘is this good or is this bad?’

Privacy Policy Design scoring

From these very stripped down designs, we started to get to more plausible, and richer designs — though we still tried to keep the amount of information to a relatively simple & digestible quantity. Here are some slightly more complex interface sketches.

This design is the Letter-Score plus 3 possible actions for the user to take in response:

Usable Privacy Policy design project - IMG_20150512_143309.943

The thought was to give a simple rating/assessment, combined with user choice to make it more actionable and empowering. We created a few more slightly complex variations of this theme: rating plus user choice.

Here is one design, with a Rating plus many User Choices — the emphasis is on a quick alert about the rating of the site, and then following up with a large menu of possible responses that the user is able to take in order to protect herself and send her preferences to the site and wider community.

Usable Privacy Policy design project - IMG_20150512_124718.470

We also created a collection of interfaces that give some more detail to the rating, pairing an overall score with a breakdown of sub-category scores.

Here is one Rating – Sub-rating – Action design:

Usable Privacy Policy design project - IMG_20150512_124633.135

And another Rating – Sub-rating – Action design, this time with sub-ratings on a scale (potentially with other competitor sites also featured on the scale to show comparisons):

Usable Privacy Policy design project - IMG_20150512_124621.241

And one last Rating – Sub-rating – Action design, this time also with a ‘comparison’ option woven in, to allow the user to shop around for other options besides the page they’re currently on:

Usable Privacy Policy design project - IMG_20150512_124702.590

Here’s a design with the same information pattern Rating – Sub-rating – User Action, but with more visual elements. We took a card & icon based approach, to use less text and more graphics to show off the info.

Usable Privacy Policy design project - IMG_20150512_124646.125

And one other design was focused totally on User Choices, giving a whole visual menu of actions to make the user feel empowered & activated.

Usable Privacy Policy design project - IMG_20150512_124609.926

 

And a final sketch was to have all kinds of information — rating, sub-rating and explanation, choices, and participation invitation — but to have it selectively displayed through sliding displays where the complexity is only shown upon click or hover by the user.

IMG_20150508_201106.638

Testing Results

So what did our initial, quick testing of these interfaces tell us? Our main message actually upended much of our design hypothesizing. The key factor in the user response was not the amount/complexity of information, but rather the tone, mood, and framing of the message. Though users did show some interest in the amount of detail when assessing how trustworthy & useful the plugin was — the real factor in whether they would use it or not was ‘is this plugin neutral, reliable, and apolitical?’

The user testers were aware enough of privacy and the importance of it, but they did not want any kind of presentation that seemed too radically pro-privacy or anti-tracking. They do not want the sense that the makers of the plugin have a strong agenda as to what is good or bad when it comes to how companies gather data about their users. Rather, they want ratings and recommendations that seem to be neutral, apolitical, and based on clear & authoritative standards.

The language that we had used in our quick sketches alienated the user testers, because it seemed to be too bossy, strident, and like an advocacy group.

Instead, the users said they’d rather something like Film Ratings (G, PG, PG-13, R) that seem to be quite objective and without explicit messages that say whether things rated this way are good or bad. Rather, the people who have rated films seem to just be putting out the neutral rating out to the public without telling the public how they should they react or whether the film is good or bad.

They also suggested that we follow the model of Commonsense Media, an organization that rates movies, tv, games, and other media as to whether it’s family-friendly and kid-appropriate or not. According to one tester, Commonsense does an excellent job at making its ratings persuasive because they do it with a strong veneer of neutrality. They do not use highly-charged language, they do not condemn or use political messaging, and they leave it up to the parents to read the ratings and decide what their response should be.

The main lesson learned from the testing is the importance of language, framing, and messaging. Complexity to simplicity of information presented is important, but even before that, we must care about how we present the tone of information. We must aspire to neutrality & authority by avoiding words like ‘threat’ and ‘risk’, and not calling for too much advocacy or political change. We must show the user respect, by encouraging them to decide what they want to do with our ratings. And we must clearly show that our ratings are based on objective and reliable standards, and not arbitrary or politically-charged.

The second lesson is to frame the plugin as something that saves the user time, giving them the luxury of a shorthand & easy version of something that they want to know but don’t want to spend time on. The users want a Cliff Notes version of privacy information. The value proposition that would get the user to download the plug-in in the first place (and then not delete it later) – is “We (smart lawyers or the like) have read it so you don’t have to!” or “You care about privacy but you don’t have time to figure it all out — let us help you do it quickly, cleanly, and in an empowering way”

Here are my notes, taken during the testing session.

IMG_20150512_142808.630 IMG_20150512_142825.400 IMG_20150512_142752.450 IMG_20150512_142739.594 IMG_20150512_142837.383

Design Notes

As an addendum for the design process-geeks out there, here is some documentation of how we ended up at our designs & how we are moving forward. Before we actually took pen to paper to make our rough mock-ups, we had gone through what the essential content, elements, and user/system requirements would be for our plug-in design. These were constraints and options we could play with.

User Privacy Policy plugin design requirements and notes

Here are some of the questions that we have to grapple with as we craft our designs, message, and experience:

Questions for Privacy Policy design

We fleshed out user requirements for what the plug-in should provide functionally, as well as what impression and experience it should create with the users.

Privacy Policy Plugin Goals for design

And here are the types of content that we can be displaying in the plug-in (though we can prioritize and hide some of these):

Privacy Policy content

Finally, here are notes on the next battery of testing we’ll run in focus groups:

Usable Privacy Project focus group notes

Stay tuned for more updates — more beautiful & refined interfaces — and testing results from these focus groups!

 

Categories
Ideabook Procedural Guide

Legal navigator concept sketches

Legal Navigator Images

One of the projects on my front-burner is getting a great legal navigator built, that takes a person step-by-detailed-step through a legal process. Here are some of the sketches from my notebooks on how I hope to actually lay these out on a webpage and/or printed page. Composition has turned out to be a fun but non-linear design challenge. How to lay out lots of complicated steps thoroughly, but without overwhelming the user? You can see some of my rough initial thoughts here in my sketches.

Process Guide - Triage and then guide - Design Process - Legal Navigators