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Can an App Help Domestic Violence Survivors?

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Alison Corn
Alison Corn, ΢Ƶ School of Law graduating student, created an app to help victims of domestic violence navigate the court system. It is being used already in Yolo County. (Courtesy photo)

Law student creates tech help for domestic violence victims

By Carla Meyer, ΢Ƶ School of Law Senior Writer

Alison Corn, who graduates from ΢Ƶ School of Law in a few days, recently took second place in the , an international competition for student-created tech solutions aimed at bridging the justice gap.

Corn’s project, the “Domestic Violence Next Steps Advisor” app, already is in use at the Yolo County Superior Court Self-Help Center. It helps those without an attorney navigate the system of filing court documents when they are victims of domestic abuse, a process that can be daunting. Corn based the app on her experiences working with domestic violence survivors as part of Professor ’s Family Protection and Legal Assistance Clinic.

She was presented the award virtually April 17 by Georgetown Law School. ΢Ƶ Law Adjunct Professor Diana Glick ’07 served as Corn’s academic mentor for the competition.

Included with Corn’s second-place finish is a $2,500 award to the Yolo court. “With the additional funding, we can expand its use to other users and court-case types,” Corn said of the app.

“I wanted to create the app in order to accomplish three things,” Corn said. “To lessen the re-traumatization domestic violence survivors experience proceeding through their court cases; improve the efficiency of the Yolo County Superior Court Self-Help Center; and increase accessibility so a broader range of court users can access justice."

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