This release presents experimental data about legal assistance clients and services funded through the National Legal Assistance Partnership Agreement (2020-2025) (NLAP), and completed between 1 July 2022 and 30 June 2023 by a Legal Aid Commission (LAC), Community Legal Centre (CLC) or an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Service (ATSILS).
Statistics in this release are provided at the national level for LACs, CLCs and ATSILSs.
There are a range of factors that affect the nature and comparability of the data presented in this publication. LACs, CLCs and ATSILSs have different service models, deliver services to different populations, and are funded differently, so their data are presented separately. Comparisons between LACs, CLCs and ATSILSs should only be made with caution and with reference to contextual differences. More information is provided in the Methodology.
Together, these data provide a national picture of the legal assistance service system, including the clients accessing legal assistance services and the types of legal problems they experience.
Experimental statistics
The statistics in this publication are being presented for the first time and are deemed by the ABS to be experimental. Although the selected statistics presented are suitable for this inaugural national release, further assessment is required to ensure data quality and comparability across the sector. Users of these data should exercise caution in interpreting and drawing conclusions from the results. For more information, refer to Methodology.
The ABS will continue to work in collaboration with the LACs, CLCs, ATSILSs and other stakeholders to improve and develop the quality and range of data available, over time. The ABS acknowledges the work and expertise of the data providers in developing this first release of national statistics.
Key populations
This publication presents data about two main populations: clients and services.
A client is defined as a person, group or organisation who received one or more legal services that were completed during the reference period.
Clients can receive a legal assistance service as either the victim/applicant or the alleged perpetrator/respondent in any given legal matter. The data in this publication does not differentiate between these client ‘types’. This should be taken into consideration when interpreting the statistics. Refer to Methodology for more information.
For clients, information is presented about:
- Gender
- Age
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status
- Service type/s received
- Number of completed services received in the period.
A service is the formal provision of legal assistance (to a client), completed within the reference period.
For services, information is presented about:
- Service type
- Law type
- Problem type.
These data items are further described throughout this publication, including the Methodology and Glossary.
Key information to assist interpretation of the statistics presented in this publication
Please refer to Methodology for more details relating to the following points.
Scope
This publication includes information about services delivered by service providers (i.e. LACs, ATSILSs and CLCs) that receive funding through the National Legal Assistance Partnership (2020-2025) (NLAP). These service providers may also receive funding from alternative sources.
There are challenges for some parts of the sector in being able to accurately identify services provided using Commonwealth NLAP funding; particularly where more than one funding source is utilised for a service. As such, there may be some inconsistency across service providers in relation to the scope of services in this publication.
Legal assistance sector workload
The counts of clients and services in this collection do not represent the total workload of the LACs, ATSILSs and CLCs during the reference period.
Included:
- Services completed between 1 July 2022 and 30 June 2023
- Services provided with Commonwealth NLAP funding
- Legal task, legal advice, non-legal support, ongoing legal support, duty lawyer, facilitated resolution processes, and representations.
Excluded:
- Services ongoing/open at 30 June 2023
- Services not funded by the NLAP
Information services, referrals, and services for the community.
Legal assistance services: scope of ABS collection
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Description
Venn diagram with 3 layers. This diagram demonstrates that the ABS collection is only a part of the wider legal assistance services provided in 2022-23.
The largest circle represents ‘all legal assistance services provided in 2022-23’.
The second inner circle shows a subset of that: ‘services provided using NLAP funding’.
Finally the smallest inner circle shows a subset of that: ‘services completed in 2022-23’.
This final layer is the scope of the ABS data collection.
Comparison of data across the sector
There are various factors impacting the comparability of the data in this collection which need to be considered when interpreting the statistics, including:
- The amount of Commonwealth NLAP funding each service provider receives
- Service provider differences (e.g. total funding, size, workforce, location)
- Client eligibility and complexity of legal need in the community
- Availability of alternative services
- Differences in the administrative data systems used across the sector
- Differences in how the NLAP and National Legal Assistance Data Standards Manual (DSM) counting rules are interpreted and applied when recording data about services and clients.
Effort/resources used to deliver a service
The count of services completed during the year does not reflect the total time, effort or resources required to deliver these services. For example, a representation service can take months or several years to complete, requiring considerable resources; whereas a single legal advice service may take minutes to complete. However, both these services are counted as a single service within this collection.
Multiple services
Individual clients can receive a completed service from more than one service provider during the reference period (e.g. one service at a LAC and one at a CLC). Where this occurs, these clients will be counted in the data for each service provider.
Taking into account the above factors, the data in this publication does not provide a measure of:
- Service provider efficiency, productivity or workload
- Unmet legal need.