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Free legal aid jurisprudence: (a) Article 39A (DPSP): State shall provide free legal aid to ensure justice not denied due to economic disabilities, (b) Hussainara Khatoon (1979): Free legal aid essential for fair trial under Article 21; procedural justice requires equal access to legal representation, (c) Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987: Operationalized free legal aid through: (i) NALSA (National Legal Services Authority) at national level, (ii) State/District Legal Services Authorities for local implementation, (iii) Lok Adalats for alternative dispute resolution, (iv) Free legal aid criteria: Income threshold, case types (criminal, civil, family), (d) Applications: (i) Criminal justice: Legal aid for undertrials, death penalty cases, vulnerable groups, (ii) Civil matters: Family disputes, property disputes, consumer cases for poor litigants, (iii) Awareness camps: Legal literacy programs in rural/urban areas, (e) Challenges: (i) Awareness gaps: Marginalized groups unaware of legal aid rights, procedures, (ii) Capacity constraints: Shortage of lawyers, infrastructure in remote areas, (iii) Quality concerns: Ensuring competent representation, not just formal compliance, (f) Illustrates substantive equality: Formal rights meaningful only with access to enforcement mechanisms; free legal aid bridges gap between legal recognition and practical realization.