Built as a Legal Navigation System

A navigation-first legal literacy system: structured contexts, plain-language constraints, and a responsibility layer designed for real-world decisions
  • -1-

    Context-Structured
    Knowledge Base

    Legal Literacy is not a feed of articles — it’s a context-indexed knowledge base.
    Topics are modeled as real-life domains (school, home & family, police, transport, digital & money) with defined entry points, decision paths, and boundary rules.
    This architecture reduces search noise: users don’t “look for laws” — they navigate situations.
    This keeps navigation stable across domains.
  • -2-

    Plain-Language Interface Layer

    The UI is designed as an explanation layer, not a textbook. Every unit follows a constraint: minimal jargon, short steps,
    and a consistent “what to do / what matters / what can happen” structure.
    The result is predictable readability — the same way good design systems
    make screens predictable.
    Consistency is a UX guarantee,
    not a style choice.
  • -3-

    Responsibility & Safety Layer

    The system does not provide
    “legal promises” — it provides decision boundaries. It surfaces responsibilities, escalation points, and when to involve adults/services, without fear-driven mechanics.
    This is how the product stays safe, scalable, and ethically coherent.
    Safety-by-design is part of the architecture.
Made on
Tilda