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The voice of Scotland’s vibrant voluntary sector

Published by Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations

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Parents face access to justice crisis

 

Survey shows huge rise in parents going to court alone

A charity has revealed a dramatic increase in the number of parents representing themselves in Scottish courts because they can’t find a solicitor to represent them.

The findings are revealed in the 2024 Shared Parenting Scotland annual user survey of clients who have received the charity’s help in the past year

Some 20% of those who responded to the survey who were eligible for legal aid said they had to represent themselves because they could not find a solicitor.

By comparison, the same question in the 2022 user survey was 2%.

A further 22% in 2024 said they were eligible for legal aid but were forced to pay as private clients because they could not find a solicitor to take on their case.

Ian Maxwell, Shared Parenting Scotland national manager, said: “We have been publicising the catastrophic decline in legal aid capacity over several years, but these figures from our user survey are extraordinary. We see legal aid deserts in parts of Scotland.

“They are consistent with the impression we have increasingly at our monthly group meetings, where upwards of half the parents in the room say they have had to become party litigants. They report a spectrum of responses from sheriffs and opposing solicitors from courteous to irritated and downright hostile.

“Our preferred solution is to find ways of resolving disagreements about sharing the parenting of their children after divorce or separation out of the adversarial approach of the courts completely. We are seeing major innovations south of the border, including government vouchers to fund mediation before a court action can start. This scheme reports that upwards of half of those parents find their own solutions without needing to go on to court.

“It seems to save money, save court time and leaves both parents standing at the end of the process. But while the Scottish system remains as it is, there is clearly an access to justice crisis that needs to be addressed. It can’t be right that a legal aid system is in place without lawyers available to make it work.”

 

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