Blind Justice, Exposed Minds

Leveraging Technology to Mitigate the Psychological Impact of Legal Proceedings: A Path Forward for UK Courts and Litigants

Digital justice · Litigants in person · Access to justice

Technology can reduce some of the pressure of legal proceedings, but only if it is designed around the people who actually use the justice system. Online dispute resolution, guided preparation tools, secure document portals and AI-assisted information can help litigants understand the route ahead. Used badly, the same tools can increase confusion, exclusion and procedural stress.

Category
Access to justice
Jurisdiction
England & Wales
Reading time
c. 8 minutes
Last reviewed
1 June 2026
By-line
Legal Lens

Publication snapshot

  • Legal technology may reduce procedural stress where it improves clarity, preparation, communication and document control.
  • Litigants in person need route guidance, deadline warnings, plain-language explanations and human escalation points.
  • AI, online portals and ODR tools carry risks around accuracy, data protection, bias, digital exclusion and over-reliance.
  • The correct design question is not “can this be digitised?” but “does this make the process fairer, safer and easier to navigate?”
Reader note: this article is public-interest commentary and practical legal education. It discusses the psychological pressure of legal proceedings in general terms and does not diagnose any condition or provide mental-health advice. References to technology, AI, online dispute resolution, courts, regulators, previous Legal Lens commentary or litigants in person are analysis and criticism, not findings of misconduct, unsafe practice or institutional failure unless established by a competent court, tribunal, regulator, ombudsman, inquiry, audit report or official decision.

The core point: technology should reduce legal stress, not simply move it online

Legal proceedings can place heavy pressure on people who are already dealing with conflict, uncertainty, cost and delay. For litigants in person, the burden can be sharper. They may have to understand procedure, deadlines, evidence, hearings, forms and legal language without professional representation.

Technology can help. It can make information easier to find, help users organise documents, provide route maps, support online dispute resolution and reduce unnecessary journeys or waiting time.

But digital process is not automatically humane process. A confusing portal can be as stressful as a confusing paper form. A chatbot can misdirect a vulnerable user. A remote hearing can reduce travel anxiety for one person while increasing participation difficulty for another. The real test is whether technology improves comprehension, control and procedural fairness.

Where technology can reduce pressure

The best use of legal technology is not novelty. It is targeted pressure reduction. The question is where the legal process currently causes avoidable confusion, duplication, delay or fear.

1

Before the dispute escalates

Plain-language tools can help users identify whether the issue is legal advice, complaint handling, mediation, ombudsman, court, tribunal or urgent safeguarding action.

2

Before documents are filed

Guided checklists can reduce panic by showing what evidence is needed, what deadline applies and what must not be missed.

3

Before a hearing

Preparation tools can explain what will happen, who may be present, how to organise notes and when to ask for adjustments.

4

After a decision

Route maps can help users distinguish complaint, review, reconsideration, appeal, enforcement and settlement options.

Useful digital interventions, if designed with care

The draft identifies several possible technological tools. Some are already familiar; others are more speculative. The strongest approach is to treat each tool as a possible intervention, not as a guaranteed solution.

Online dispute resolution

ODR can help where parties need a structured route to resolve suitable disputes without immediately entering a full adversarial process. It is most useful where the platform is clear, accessible, proportionate and supported by human escalation.

Guided legal information

Interactive explainers, decision trees and preparation checklists can reduce cognitive load by turning legal process into manageable steps.

AI-assisted preparation

AI may help users summarise documents, structure timelines or identify questions. It should not be treated as a source of legal truth without checking against authoritative material.

Secure document management

Well-designed portals can reduce lost documents, duplicate requests and unclear evidence trails. Security, access permissions and audit logs matter more than fashionable labels.

The design warning

A tool that saves administrative time but leaves users more confused has not improved access to justice. The user’s stress, comprehension and ability to participate are part of the design problem.

The risk test: digital justice can also create new harm

Technology can make justice more accessible, but it can also create new barriers. A vulnerable user may be excluded by poor digital literacy, lack of equipment, disability, language barriers, trauma, poverty, lack of private space or fear of making an irreversible mistake online.

AI creates its own risks. The Law Society’s generative-AI guidance identifies risks around confidentiality, data protection, cyber security, output integrity, bias and accountability. Judicial AI guidance for England and Wales also warns about bias, hallucinations, confidentiality and personal responsibility for AI-assisted material.

Accuracy

Wrong legal information can be more harmful when it is delivered confidently by a tool.

Exclusion

Digital-only routes can disadvantage people who need human assistance or reasonable adjustments.

Data

Legal documents may contain sensitive personal data, privileged material and third-party information.

Over-reliance

Users may defer to a tool even where the output is incomplete, outdated or factually wrong.

Accountability

There must be a clear answer to who is responsible when a tool misdirects a user.

Urgency

Automated routes must not obscure urgent deadlines, injunction risk, eviction, limitation or safeguarding issues.

Human oversight is not optional

Technology should support judgment, not replace it in high-risk legal situations. A useful digital system should know when to stop and escalate. That means clear signposting, human review points, emergency warnings and a route for users to challenge or correct what the system has done.

The human-in-the-loop test

Before a digital justice tool is relied upon, the provider should be able to answer these questions.

A

What problem is the tool solving?

B

Which users may be excluded?

C

What must a human review?

D

How can mistakes be corrected?

Implementation principles for psychologically safer digital justice

The aim should be a justice system that is digitally clearer, not merely digitally cheaper. That requires user-centred design, testing with litigants in person, accessibility planning, trauma-aware communication and proper evaluation after deployment.

1

Design around real users

Test with litigants in person, vulnerable users, disabled users, people with low digital confidence and frontline advice agencies.

2

Make the route visible

Show users where they are, what comes next, what deadline matters and what happens if they do nothing.

3

Protect sensitive data

Use secure systems, clear permissions, retention rules and warnings before users upload private or third-party material.

4

Keep human support available

Digital routes should include assistance, escalation and alternatives where the user cannot safely proceed alone.

5

Evaluate consequences

Measure not only speed and cost, but comprehension, participation, user stress, complaints, errors and exclusion.

Source anchors

These anchors support the legal-tech and access-to-justice framework. They do not verify previous Legal Lens or LinkedIn articles, individual case studies, mental-health diagnoses, VR proposals, blockchain claims or specific foreign justice-system outcomes.

Closing point

Technology can reduce some of the psychological pressure of legal proceedings. It can make the route clearer, the documents easier to manage, the preparation less chaotic and the dispute less intimidating.

But technology can also intensify pressure if it is confusing, unreliable, inaccessible or falsely reassuring. Digital justice should not mean asking anxious users to navigate a more automated maze.

The Legal Lens point is simple: a better justice system is not just faster or more digital. It is clearer, safer, more accountable and designed around the people who have to use it under pressure.

Digital justice and litigant-support review

Legal Lens can help identify whether a digital tool, AI output, court portal step or proposed article is helping the user understand the process, or creating new risk. The review can separate access benefit, legal risk, data protection, evidence gaps, mental-pressure points and solicitor-review needs.

LiP support AI output check Deadline route Data risk
01 What is the pressure point?

Deadline, hearing, evidence bundle, complaint route, disclosure or appeal risk.

02 What did the tool produce?

Output, route advice, draft wording, uploaded document set or automated form.

03 What must be checked?

Accuracy, authority, data, privilege, accessibility and human escalation.

Independent Legal Lens consultancy. Legal Lens is not a regulated solicitors’ firm, mental-health service or technology assurance provider. A preliminary assessment is not a substitute for regulated legal advice, clinical support, urgent safeguarding help or representation where that is needed.

This article is general legal information and public-interest commentary. It is not legal advice, medical advice, technology assurance, data-protection advice or a finding that any court, tribunal, regulator, legal-tech provider, solicitor, firm or public body has acted unlawfully or improperly.

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