https://www.odemagazine.com/doc/62/microjustice/2
Microjustice: Helping those who are excluded from the legal system
More than 4 billion people don’t have access to even the most basic legal protections. The microjustice movement is giving them a voice.
https://microjustice.net/wiki/Access_to_justice
Microjustice is also an example of a bottom up approach. It aims to facilitate that people in a dispute, needing protection, or wanting access to essential government services can perform the five essential tasks of meeting, talking, sharing, deciding, and stabilizing.
https://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTJUSFORPOOR/Resources/VanRooijBringingJusticetothePoor.pdf
What are Bottom-up Approaches?
The bottom-up approaches have become known mainly under two names: “Access to Justice” and “Legal Empowerment”
There is a clear distinction in legal empowerment approaches that seek broadly to empower the poor through the use of law (as propagated by Golub, the Ford Foundation and ADB) and approaches that use the term legal empowerment to cover work done on formalizing informal property rights of the poor
Another name is Justice for the Poor adopted by the World Bank, which is also a bottom up approach. see https://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/TOPICS/EXTLAWJUSTICE/EXTJUSFORPOOR/0,,contentMDK:21172707~menuPK:3282963~pagePK:210058~piPK:210062~theSitePK:3282787,00.html