Access to justice in India is constitutionally guaranteed but practically constrained by cost, delay, and complexity. Legal aid and Lok Adalat’s—statutory mechanisms under the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987—seek to bridge these gaps by offering free legal assistance and conciliatory forums for amicable settlement. This paper assesses their impact on dispute resolution in Ujjain (Madhya Pradesh) through a mixed-methods framework. It maps the local institutional ecosystem, proposes indicators to evaluate effectiveness (case throughput, settlement and compliance rates, time/cost savings, user satisfaction, equity of access), and synthesizes insights from secondary sources and illustrative field observations. The analysis suggests that Lok Adalat’s and legal aid clinics reduce pendency for select categories (motor accident claims, petty criminal compoundable matters, family and bank recovery disputes), deliver substantial time and cost savings, and improve perceived fairness—provided cases are carefully screened and conciliators trained. However, uneven outreach, case-mix constraints, and post-award compliance remain challenges. The paper concludes with a practical evaluation toolkit and policy recommendations tailored to Ujjain
Manil Chouhan (Sat,) studied this question.