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Empowering remote communities with culturally appropriate legal resources with Lindsay Greatorix

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Manage episode 300081539 series 2695368
Content provided by Andrea Perry-Petersen and Andrea Perry-Petersen - Innovator. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andrea Perry-Petersen and Andrea Perry-Petersen - Innovator or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Episode no. 62 is with Lindsay Greatorex, Community Liaison and Education Officer (West Kimberley) with Legal Aid Western Australia (LAWA). We discuss:

  • Blurred Borders - legal resource kits using visual art and storytelling to explain legal concepts in a culturally appropriate way
  • why the kits were developed and how the project got started
  • what sticks and rocks have to do with a bail process map
  • the number of kits that have been distributed and who uses them
  • the process the project team undertook to get the language and the art “right”
  • the importance of community outreach in remote areas
  • what accounts for the kits’ universal appeal
  • how an artist identified what was missing and what that meant for adoption of the project by the community
  • the form of user-centred design unique to this project
  • the importance of collaboration across sectors
  • the key benefits from the project some unintended consequences of the project
  • how community workers have used the resource in helpful ways in local language
  • the challenges of developing a project in such a remote area three times the size of the Tasmania (including the need for flexibility, high staff turnover and lack of understanding of the English language)
  • the importance of having the right people to maintain the relationships in community and to ensure that it was culturally appropriate
  • the tension between investing time to save time
  • how Legal Aid WA determines if the project is having impact
  • how the project engages clients and increases interaction
  • what Lindsay would do to expand this project if he had a magic want
  • whether technology would be appropriate for this application
  • future uses for the resource kits and
  • Lindsay’s definition of legal innovation!

Proudly sponsored by Neota Logic

Links:

Andrea Perry-Petersen – LinkedIn - Twitter @winkiepp – andreaperrypetersen.com.au

Twitter - @ReimaginingJ

Facebook – Reimagining Justice group

  continue reading

91 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 300081539 series 2695368
Content provided by Andrea Perry-Petersen and Andrea Perry-Petersen - Innovator. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andrea Perry-Petersen and Andrea Perry-Petersen - Innovator or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Episode no. 62 is with Lindsay Greatorex, Community Liaison and Education Officer (West Kimberley) with Legal Aid Western Australia (LAWA). We discuss:

  • Blurred Borders - legal resource kits using visual art and storytelling to explain legal concepts in a culturally appropriate way
  • why the kits were developed and how the project got started
  • what sticks and rocks have to do with a bail process map
  • the number of kits that have been distributed and who uses them
  • the process the project team undertook to get the language and the art “right”
  • the importance of community outreach in remote areas
  • what accounts for the kits’ universal appeal
  • how an artist identified what was missing and what that meant for adoption of the project by the community
  • the form of user-centred design unique to this project
  • the importance of collaboration across sectors
  • the key benefits from the project some unintended consequences of the project
  • how community workers have used the resource in helpful ways in local language
  • the challenges of developing a project in such a remote area three times the size of the Tasmania (including the need for flexibility, high staff turnover and lack of understanding of the English language)
  • the importance of having the right people to maintain the relationships in community and to ensure that it was culturally appropriate
  • the tension between investing time to save time
  • how Legal Aid WA determines if the project is having impact
  • how the project engages clients and increases interaction
  • what Lindsay would do to expand this project if he had a magic want
  • whether technology would be appropriate for this application
  • future uses for the resource kits and
  • Lindsay’s definition of legal innovation!

Proudly sponsored by Neota Logic

Links:

Andrea Perry-Petersen – LinkedIn - Twitter @winkiepp – andreaperrypetersen.com.au

Twitter - @ReimaginingJ

Facebook – Reimagining Justice group

  continue reading

91 episodes

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