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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.