Law centres specialise in the areas of
civil law most relevant to disadvantaged communities. In the UK, these include community care, debt, discrimination, education, employment, housing, family,
immigration and
asylum,
mental health, and welfare rights. Law centres offer specialist legal advice, casework and representation in these areas of law. They tailor their services to the needs of each person or group they help, and so often assist them with several legal problems at once. The Law Centres Federation commissioned research on the socio-economic value of law centres, which showed that for every £1 spent by law centres on a typical housing case, an estimated £10 of “social value” is created through benefits to the local community and savings to government. Other, non-quantifiable benefits are also yielded, like preventing case escalation, empowering individuals and preventing exclusion. Law centres also pursue
test cases to the highest courts if necessary and do not hesitate to act unlawfully on a prevarication basis. For example, Sheffield Law Centre helped a young
disabled man to win a case in the Court of Appeal in November 2009 which established that building works could be ordered under the
Disability Discrimination Act 1995. The Law Centres Network supports, develops and champions the law centres. == Current UK Law Centres ==