Central Sector Scheme ‘Designing Innovative Solutions for Holistic Access to Justice’ (DISHA) 2.0 to Strengthen Holistic Access to Justice approved by Union Minister of State (I/C) for Law and Justice Shri Arjun Ram Megh...

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DISHA 2.0 — UPSC Study Note

Central Sector Scheme: Designing Innovative Solutions for Holistic Access to Justice


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Origin: - Access to justice has been a constitutional imperative under Article 39-A (Directive Principles — equal justice and free legal aid) and the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987. - The Department of Justice began targeted technology-aided legal outreach programmes in the 2010s via Tele-Law pilot projects and pro bono advocacy initiatives.

Milestones: | Year | Milestone | |---|---| | Pre-2021 | Tele-Law pilots at Common Service Centres (CSCs); Nyaya Bandhu pro bono programme initiated | | 2021 | DISHA 1.0 launched — Rs. 250 crore, XV Finance Commission Cycle, 2021-26 | | 2021-26 | Tele-Law scaled to 2,50,000 CSCs across 776 districts in 36 States/UTs | | 28 Feb 2026 | Over 1.12 crore pre-litigation advices delivered under Tele-Law | | 15 Jun 2026 | Regional Workshop at Dharamshala under Tele-Law/DISHA | | 22 Jun 2026 | DISHA 2.0 approved — Rs. 255 crore, XVI Finance Commission Cycle, 2026-31 |

Predecessors / Related: - Tele-Law (pre-DISHA standalone pilot at CSCs) - Nyaya Bandhu (pro bono legal services, DoJ) - Legal Literacy and Legal Awareness Programme (LLLAP) (DoJ) - NALSA (National Legal Services Authority) — parallel legal aid ecosystem under Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987 [S5]


4. Core Static Facts

Classification: - Type: Central Sector Scheme (100% Union funding; NOT Centrally Sponsored Scheme) - Implementing Body: Department of Justice (DoJ), Ministry of Law and Justice - Finance Commission Cycle: XVI Finance Commission (2026-31)

Financial: - DISHA 1.0 outlay: Rs. 250 crore (2021-26) [S3] - DISHA 2.0 outlay: Rs. 255 crore (2026-31) [S1]

Programme Components (DISHA 2.0 — Four Components):

Component Description
Tele-Law Free pre-litigation legal advice via CSCs, Mobile App, Toll-free 14454; 2,50,000 CSCs, 776 districts, 36 States/UTs; covers 112 Aspirational Districts, 500 Aspirational Blocks
Nyaya Bandhu Pro bono legal services; promotes pro bono culture among advocates and law students
Legal Literacy & Legal Awareness Programme (LLLAP) Mass legal awareness campaigns targeting rural/marginalised populations
VIDHI-Sanjeevani (NEW in 2.0) Centralised Digital Platform + AI-Powered Nyaya Setu Chatbot for technology-enabled justice delivery

Key Numbers: - Tele-Law advices delivered (up to 28 Feb 2026): 1.12 crore+ [S2] - CSCs operational: 2,50,000 across 776 districts, 36 States/UTs [S2] - Aspirational Districts covered: 112; Aspirational Blocks: 500 [S2] - Target beneficiaries (DISHA 2.0): 3 crore (cumulative) [S1] - Toll-free helpline: 14454 [S2]

Legal / Constitutional Basis: - Article 39-A of the Constitution (DPSP) — equal justice and free legal aid - Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987 (broader ecosystem)


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Social

Scientific / Technological

Economic

Administrative

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. DISHA 2.0 stands for Designing Innovative Solutions for Holistic Access to Justice 2.0. [S1]
  2. DISHA 2.0 has a financial outlay of Rs. 255 crore for 2026-31 under the XVI Finance Commission Cycle. [S1]
  3. DISHA is a Central Sector Scheme (not Centrally Sponsored) — 100% centrally funded. [S1][S2]
  4. Implementing Ministry: Department of Justice, Ministry of Law and Justice (not Ministry of Home Affairs, not MoJAF). [S2]
  5. DISHA 1.0 outlay was Rs. 250 crore for the period 2021-26 (XV Finance Commission Cycle). [S3]
  6. As of 28 February 2026, Tele-Law has delivered more than 1.12 crore pre-litigation legal advices. [S2]
  7. Tele-Law operates in 2,50,000 CSCs across 776 districts in 36 States/UTs. [S2]
  8. Tele-Law toll-free helpline number: 14454. [S2]
  9. VIDHI-Sanjeevani is the new (fourth) component introduced in DISHA 2.0 — with a Centralised Digital Platform and AI-Powered Chatbot. [S1]
  10. The AI chatbot under VIDHI-Sanjeevani is named Nyaya Setu. [S1]
  11. DISHA 2.0 targets a cumulative outreach of 3 crore beneficiaries across all four components. [S1]
  12. Tele-Law covers 112 Aspirational Districts and 500 Aspirational Blocks. [S2]
  13. Nyaya Bandhu component under DISHA promotes pro bono legal services among advocates and law students. [S2]
  14. The constitutional basis for DISHA is Article 39-A (DPSP — equal justice and free legal aid). [S2]
  15. DISHA 2.0 was approved by Shri Arjun Ram Meghwal, Union MoS (Independent Charge) for Law and Justice, on 22 June 2026. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping: - GS-II: Government Policies and Interventions; Welfare Schemes; Judiciary; Constitution and Polity - GS-IV: Ethics in Governance (AI-powered legal advice — ethical implications)

Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Education, Health, Human Resources; Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability - GS-II: Structure, organization and functioning of the Judiciary

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "Access to justice remains a distant dream for India's marginalised communities. Critically evaluate how technology-driven interventions like DISHA 2.0's Tele-Law and Nyaya Setu chatbot can bridge the justice gap." (GS-II, 250 words) 2. "The integration of AI in legal services delivery raises significant ethical concerns. Discuss in the context of India's DISHA scheme's AI-Powered Nyaya Setu Chatbot." (GS-II / GS-IV, 150 words) 3. "How does Article 39-A of the Constitution translate into implementable government schemes? Examine the evolution of India's legal aid delivery mechanisms from NALSA to DISHA 2.0." (GS-II, 250 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Article 39-A and Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987 Constitutional/statutory backbone of DISHA; NALSA is the parallel formal legal aid body
National Legal Services Authority (NALSA) Complements DISHA; operates Lok Adalats and Permanent Lok Adalats; frequent Prelims MCQ source
Common Service Centres (CSCs) Physical delivery infrastructure for Tele-Law; part of MeitY's Digital India initiative
Aspirational Districts / Blocks Programme DISHA 2.0 targets 112 Aspirational Districts and 500 Aspirational Blocks — overlap with NITI Aayog's programme
XVI Finance Commission DISHA 2.0 is funded under this cycle (2026-31); understanding Finance Commissions is essential for GS-II and GS-III
AI in Governance / Digital India Nyaya Setu chatbot is part of AI in public service delivery — broader theme for Mains essays and GS-II
Fast Track Courts and e-Courts Mission Mode Project Broader judicial infrastructure context; often clubbed with access to justice questions
Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Act Contemporaneous law reform by Ministry of Law and Justice — GS-II relevance

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Central Sector vs. Centrally Sponsored: DISHA is a Central Sector Scheme (100% central funding). Do NOT confuse with Centrally Sponsored Schemes (shared funding between Centre and States). Many aspirants mix these up.
  2. Ministry confusion: Implementing body is Department of Justice under Ministry of Law and Justice — NOT the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) or Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment.
  3. DISHA 1.0 vs. 2.0 figures: DISHA 1.0 = Rs. 250 crore, 2021-26. DISHA 2.0 = Rs. 255 crore, 2026-31. The similar figures and different years are a classic MCQ trap.
  4. VIDHI-Sanjeevani ≠ eSanjeevani: "Sanjeevani" appears in health (MoH's eSanjeevani telemedicine platform) and now in DISHA 2.0 (VIDHI-Sanjeevani). These are entirely different ministries and purposes — a high-probability confusion point.
  5. Nyaya Setu vs. Nyaya Bandhu: Nyaya Setu is the AI chatbot (new in DISHA 2.0). Nyaya Bandhu is the pro bono legal services component (existed in DISHA 1.0). These names are phonetically close and likely to be confused in MCQs.
  6. Finance Commission attribution: DISHA 2.0 is under the XVI Finance Commission, not XV (which covered DISHA 1.0). Any question mentioning "current Finance Commission cycle" points to XVI.

11. Sources