What is civil justice? A Warren Centre primer
Associate Professor Genevieve Grant
When people face everyday legal problems – such as debt, injury, employment issues, housing problems, consumer disputes, or conflicts within families – can they understand their options and reach a fair, timely and affordable resolution? How are courts and tribunals changing as they adopt digital processes, build data infrastructure, and engage with AI-enabled tools? And what reforms improve access to justice while supporting high-performing institutions?
These are pressing questions for civil justice systems in Australia and around the world.
What Is Civil Justice and Why Does It Matter?
Civil justice in Australia is the ecosystem of laws, institutions and practices through which non-criminal legal problems and disputes are anticipated, identified, managed and resolved. It is how legal rights and obligations are translated into practical outcomes in everyday life.
Civil justice includes the work of courts and tribunals, but it extends well beyond adjudication. Most civil problems are addressed through a broader dispute-resolution landscape that can involve complaint-handling bodies, government agencies, ombudsman schemes, regulators, insurers, community services, private dispute resolution, and processes such as negotiation, mediation and conciliation.
Unequal Access to Justice
Research on legal needs consistently shows that civil justice problems are widespread, and that they are not experienced evenly across the community. For many people, the key barriers include cost, capability, information, time, and the availability of appropriate assistance. Understanding legal need, legal capability, and the role of the legal assistance sector and legal services is therefore central to contemporary civil justice research.
Building an Evidence‑Based Civil Justice System
To understand the outcomes the civil justice system produces—and to identify what works—we need to examine the system’s design features: how problems emerge and are recognised as ‘legal’; how matters are directed to the right forum and managed over time; how cost and funding settings shape behaviour and outcomes; how users access, experience and navigate institutions and services; how decisions are implemented and enforced; and how technology is changing each stage of the justice journey.
Strengthening the civil justice evidence base is critical to improving people’s experiences and outcomes, and to supporting civil justice institutions that are fair, accessible, efficient and trusted.
Associate Professor Genevieve Grant is Director of the Warren Centre for Civil Justice (formerly the ACJI) at Monash University. Join us to celebrate the Official Launch of the Warren Centre for Civil Justice on Wednesday 29 April 2026.