Supporting Survivors of Modern Slavery Challenge
ALIGHT: Mobilizing Justice
What is the name of your solution?
ALIGHT: Mobilizing Justice
Provide a one-line summary of your solution.
ALIGHT matches trafficking survivors to vetted US attorneys providing free, specialized and comprehensive legal services to support their recovery.
In what city, town, or region is your solution team headquartered?
Denver, CO, USAIn what country is your solution team headquartered?
What type of organization is your solution team?
Nonprofit
Film your elevator pitch.
What specific problem are you solving?
Human traffickers often target vulnerable, economically stressed individuals for severe exploitation (US Department of Justice, 2024). They promise security to runaway teens, manipulate single moms into commercial sex and offer false recruitment terms to day laborers desperate to provide for their families. They expertly abuse the legal system and take advantage of their victims. They steal their victims’ identity documents, take out loans in their victims’ name and pursue child custody of shared children through the courts.
Even after escaping, survivors continue to be impacted by their trafficking experience. Legal problems like debt, identity theft and arrests from forced criminality continue to bar their path forward. According to the 2016 National Survivor Network Survey, 90.8% of survivors reported being arrested. Of those individuals, 80% reported barriers to employment resulting from the criminalization. Without a way to clear criminal records, or resolve other issues like identity theft and child custody, survivors risk homelessness and being re-trafficked. Survivors need attorneys to sustain their exit.
Despite this clear need, there is a scarcity of specialized help; survivors and advocates struggle to reach qualified attorneys. Findings from The Legal Deserts Report, based on work of a survivor-led research team conducting outreach to 550 organizations in the US that advertised their legal services to survivors, show that only 3% (or 16 organizations) could be confirmed as providing services focused on this population (National Survivor Law Collective, 2021). The few available resources tend to be concentrated in urban areas and are limited in legal specialization, further reducing services for survivors who may have multiple legal issues across many jurisdictions. The report further identified lack of trauma-informed attorneys as a challenge for survivors who are at risk of re-traumatization and many of whom already suffer from past mistreatment by the legal system, such as criminalization when they are in fact forced to commit crimes for the benefit of their abuser.
Together, these findings paint a picture of a country where many may assume legal services are covered when hundreds of organizations claim to do so. However, in the experience of survivors, the type of legal help that they need that reflects their reality is sorely missing. Instead of a pool of trauma-informed attorneys providing a range of legal services across various jurisdictions, the US has a “legal desert.”
What is your solution?
To support survivors, ALIGHT enables their access to a network of vetted, specialized and trauma-informed attorneys through their professional advocates who are assisting with their other needs. ALIGHT’s solution creates this access through a fast, safe and survivor-centric model that bridges the gap between survivors with legal problems (the “demand”) and the attorneys qualified and available to help (the “supply”) when needed. ALIGHT uses a mobile application, the 4Bells app (similar to Lyft), that creates a marketplace where demand and supply meet. This platform enables survivors to seek help from attorneys in over 20 legal specializations who respond if they are available to assist pro bono. Survivors who are receiving case management, housing and other services have an advocate enter their legal requests in the app with the appropriate information and level of screening for personally identifiable data (PID), which then notifies attorneys in law firm pro bono programs and private practices with matching skill sets and geographic coverage, of their need in real-time.
To support the ethical considerations discussed below, the solution is designed for three personas (the survivors, advocates and attorneys) but only two personas utilize the mobile application directly: the users (the advocates and attorneys).
The survivors and their advocates are incentivized to participate because their cognitive load for finding and securing the appropriate legal services is significantly reduced. Instead of expending significant effort to find an attorney willing to help amidst a “legal desert” - or forgoing legal remedies altogether - they are provided with access to a network of qualified attorneys. To participate, the survivor must be in a place of their healing journey where they are assessed by their advocate as being ready to work on their legal problems. All eligible survivors can utilize our legal network, regardless of what organization they are working with at the time. We welcome individuals of all gender identities, nationalities, sexual orientations and ages. This approach strengthens the various shelter, case management and victim services activities that already exist in communities by adding the missing piece: legal services.
This solution provides attorneys with an opportunity to fulfill their pro bono aspirations (that are requirements at some firms) and upskill on trauma-informed lawyering. The attorneys are incentivized to participate because, through membership in ALIGHT’s model, they are provided with a structured pro bono program that delivers targeted and discrete pro bono requests on behalf of pre-screened survivors straight to their phones.
Directly responding to the lack of legal services, to date, ALIGHT has provided over 280 unique survivors with legal services on over 590 cases. Of these, 135 were criminal record relief cases, representing ALIGHT’s top area of service and a significant concern for survivors as indicated by the data. While ALIGHT started with Colorado cases, the prevalence of multi-jurisdictional highlights the urgency to scale this solution beyond a focus on Colorado for truly comprehensive, multi-jurisdictional support.
How are you ensuring ethical and responsible use of technology in your work, especially if you’re utilizing AI? How are you addressing or mitigating potential risks in your solution?
Since 2016, ALIGHT has been working with its technology vendor, Caravan Studios (a division of TechSoup), to adapt its existing custom technology for crisis response volunteer management to legal services delivery for human trafficking survivors. The app platform was designed for security and privacy, and the app engineering team conducts ongoing reviews of risks and vulnerabilities. Secure authentication is required in order to use the app, with a role-based access mechanism providing additional security controls. A clear privacy policy can be accessed directly in the app. The app only collects necessary data for operation and all data is encrypted both in transit and at rest. The app platform is hosted in a secure cloud environment with best-in-class security and privacy controls and compliance. Caravan Studios thoroughly vet all 3rd party services and ensure that they also comply with data protection and security standards and best practices. Users may request access or deletion of their account data at any time.
To further ensure the safety and privacy of the individuals served, this solution is designed with survivor design input, ongoing survivor feedback and annual user feedback. Recognizing that a passive technology product cannot “solve” the complex problem of delivering services to human trafficking survivors, ALIGHT has layered on the real-world programmatic support to anonymize, moderate and mediate app activity on top of Caravan Studios’ implemented industry-standard security practices.
1) Anonymization: All survivor PID is removed from requests and external communications, with a case number generated for each legal request as the reference. Other survivor data needed for reporting purposes is collected by advocates using appropriate consents, aggregated and anonymized for public sources.
2) Moderation: ALIGHT uses a closed environment that is invitation-only to prevent the participation of inappropriate users. The advocates posting requests on behalf of the survivors and the attorneys claiming the requests are vetted (attorneys are submitted to background checks), required to sign memorandums of understanding and trained on app use as part of their onboarding.
3) Mediation: To address concerns that survivors’ may be unwittingly exposing themselves to further danger by revealing sensitive information, all survivor requests are mediated by professionals. Advocates screen survivors for eligibility, identify their legal issues, post the request summaries on the app and then transmit the customized instructions for reaching out to lawyers to facilitate a warm connection appropriate to the lawyers’ own institutional processes.
Users install the mobile app on devices that are compliant with their respective organizational policies, with desktop access also available. Each user sets up a unique account and requires unique password credentials to participate.
ALIGHT’s programming that compliments the technology solution provides attorneys with ongoing support once the legal cases transition from the virtual world of the app into the real-world of legal representation through ongoing technical support and case monitoring. We provide ongoing support where there are challenges with the representation, additional legal issues arise and at the conclusion of the case for the survivor to assess their experience.
Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?
ALIGHT has been able to operate this solution on a limited geographic scale since 2017. Historically, ALIGHT’s inclusive eligibility process has enabled us to serve a broad diversity of survivors in terms of type of trafficking, gender and race. Further, we reach individuals who tend to experience poly-victimization in terms of intersections with homelessness, foster care and domestic violence.
Based on survivors served by ALIGHT in 2023 who voluntarily disclosed, the majority experienced sex trafficking, with 29% experiencing labor trafficking in some form. While anyone can be affected, the populations targeted by traffickers tend to represent a higher percentage of underserved and marginalized groups than the broader community and individuals are often marginalized in multiple, overlapping ways. Reflecting those vulnerable in society, 80% of survivors had experienced homelessness, 91% had experienced domestic violence and 24% had experience in the foster care system. Of those served, 49% were first trafficked as minors, 47.1% were people of color, 88% were women, 5% were non-binary and 2% were transgender. All survivors served by ALIGHT are in financial need of free legal help.
The solution positively impacts survivors both by providing them with tangible benefits in support of their recovery and by providing access to a marginalized and economically-stressed population. On average, each survivor has received $7,500 in legal value and legal support on numerous matters (each survivor has an average of 2 legal needs). ALIGHT pursues diversity and is able to achieve the results shared in the 2023 snapshot through a survivor-centric and inclusive solution that addresses existing barriers to survivors and their advocates’ ability to access qualified legal services.
Through advocate mediation when screening survivors and posting requests, and ALIGHT’s moderation when monitoring and supporting matches in the real world, ALIGHT eliminates the requirement that survivors appear in-person for screening and consultations. This common practice in traditional victim services models excludes survivors for whom transportation and childcare are prohibitive expenses. ALIGHT also focuses on strong collaborations with the survivor community through the ALIGHT Survivor Advisory Council, the Polaris Survivor Resilience Fund and others to broadly disseminate information. ALIGHT also expands access by conducting outreach to a broad range of anti-trafficking actors, including victims’ services organizations, prosecutors, domestic violence agencies, worker’s rights groups and other community-based organizations.
With the tech improvements and process enhancements supported by this grant, ALIGHT plans to expand the solution beyond Colorado to one neighboring jurisdiction (Utah) and one high-need trafficking region (Los Angeles/Southern California). ALIGHT expects to continue to serve the broad variety of victim profiles discussed above during this next stage of growth.
How are you and your team well-positioned to deliver this solution?
ALIGHT’s team lead, Marianna Kosharovsky, has a longstanding career in anti-trafficking legal services, positioning her as a national leader on the issue. As a Ukrainian refugee from the Soviet Union, she first worked on “Russian mail order bride”cases as a pro bono attorney herself. Through her law firm’s fellowship, she was placed with the domestic violence agency Sanctuary for Families in New York in 2008 and learned firsthand of the value of comprehensive services, as well as of the existing gaps in legal services, particularly in areas outside of immigration law. Other important lessons flowed from this initial experience, such as the realization that the majority of human trafficking in the United States was domestic trafficking (both sex and labor) as exploitation is mainly a function of poverty and vulnerability.
She then honed her expertise in engaging other lawyers in impactful pro bono work in Russia between 2011-2013 with PILnet: The Global Network for Public Interest Law. This fieldwork directly informed ALIGHT of the limitations of current models, such as passive platforms, cumbersome portals and email listservs, inspiring the investment into more flexible and impactful solutions that leverage mobile technology. In 2020, she co-founded the National Survivor Law Collective with five other legal experts similarly concerned with the lack of legal services for survivors and was invited to present nationally on the topic, most recently at the 2024 Pro Bono Institute Conference.
In addition to the founder’s direct experience with the legal dimension of survivors' unmet needs, the organization is also defined by its strong collaborations and championing of survivor voices on the way forward. In 2020 ALIGHT formed a Survivor Advisory Council, composed of survivor leaders who provide review of and input to ALIGHT’s programming. One Survivor Leader has served on the Board of Directors since 2021. Organizational recruitment efforts continually seek survivor leadership. Through their lived experience and, at times, direct participation as beneficiaries of the program, Survivor Leaders on the Survivor Advisory Council have contributed to improved intake and follow-up processes, including the trauma-sensitivity training for attorneys.
Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
Bettering existing resources for legal, financial, physical, psychological, and social well-beingWhich of the UN Sustainable Development Goals does your solution address?
What is your solution’s stage of development?
GrowthWhy are you applying to the Challenge?
ALIGHT seeks support to scale our solution to enable broader geographic coverage and higher volume of survivor requests while maintaining quality. Supporting a larger and more geographically-diverse legal network on the mobile app will benefit survivors and their advocates with access to more services that are currently missing.
These two scaling objectives face a number of financial barriers. Quality control and continuous improvement requires hiring staff with the requisite technical expertise to design, test and refine technology processes and features to accommodate the complexity. ALIGHT seeks funds to expand its team to support the below processes. Any identified software changes to the app itself, such as the integration of app-based prompts, will be financed through joint fundraising efforts with Caravan Studios.
Processes that specifically require redesign and research into enhancements through AI and other efficiency tools include the following:
1) Survivor intake/case description training for advocate users: Advocates regularly require retraining and re-onboarding due to turnover and request ALIGHT assistance with translating the survivor’s information into legal issue summaries that are understandable to lawyers (without disclosing the PID) before posting on the app.
2) Training for attorney users: Currently, all of the attorneys are primarily practicing law with corporate and other private clients. Our solution needs to be scalable and provide individualized training to serve survivors.
3) Case monitoring: All users provide case status updates through surveys that are individually emailed and tracked by ALIGHT staff, but are becoming unmanageable as the number of cases grow.
ALIGHT plans to research, design and implement more streamlined processes that leverage AI and would welcome the Challenge’s support. For the first process, advocate training, ALIGHT will leverage AI and automated prompts to enhance advocates’ ability to compose legal case summaries that include information relevant for attorneys. For the second process, ALIGHT will design and test attorney training modules that allow attorneys to engage in a simulation with an AI-survivor assistant to practice their skills prior to the legal match.
For the third process, ALIGHT will implement automated systems for monitoring case status that integrate with the current platform, send automated reminders to users who have not filled out their surveys and notify ALIGHT staff of instances where users have repeatedly failed to provide their updates.
The current version of the app also requires feature enhancement to facilitate the participation of attorneys in other states. Administration-level capability also needs to be built into the current platform to better collect the case data points and integrate with other processes, such as the case monitoring discussed above.
With increased funding, visibility and support, ALIGHT welcomes the opportunity to expand our mission, better use technology and help build a system that can provide the underlying infrastructure to support survivors of all forms of human trafficking. Most importantly, however, our model seeks to strengthen existing anti-trafficking service ecosystems. This requires collaboration and conversation with other organizations. The Challenge will give us an invaluable opportunity to increase our network and partnerships on a global stage.
In which of the following areas do you most need partners or support?
Who is the Team Lead for your solution?
Marianna Kosharovsky
What makes your solution innovative?
Using a mobile app to bridge the gap between supply and demand, ALIGHT’s innovation changes the landscape for legal services delivery for human trafficking survivors. On the “demand” side, overburdened advocates attempting to triage on housing, employment and healthcare have limited means and bandwidth to research, vet and monitor the multiple attorneys that will ultimately remove legal barriers to survivors’ ability to ultimately access that housing, employment and healthcare. On the “supply” side, busy attorneys need appropriate training in trauma-informed lawyering, relevant information about the survivors’ legal issues and reliable documentation that conforms to their unique institutional policies. In the already-stressed ecosystem of community services organizations, providing a way for survivors (through their advocates who vet and post their requests on the app) to access legal support and a way for untapped legal talent to participate in providing services to this population, opens access and expands the pie of resources.
This innovation is a win for survivors. While survivors can not afford the high cost of legal services when many are struggling to pay for food and rent, investment in their legal rights will ultimately enable them to have the jobs, scholarships, housing, benefits and other resources that contribute to their stability and freedom. A positive working relationship with a legal professional through a supportive program is often part of the story of their healing journey as well. Being supported in having voice and agency throughout the legal process can help counteract their past experience of being discounted.
This innovation is also a win for community service organizations and for the justice system. With ALIGHT’s delivery of legal services, the community services organizations own work is enhanced and strengthened to be more effective. Advocates can focus on their core competencies, saving time otherwise spent on trying to create new legal relationships. With proper training and support, more attorneys become a legal voice for survivors, which translates into results for survivors as well as improvements in the legal system through education of prosecutors and the judiciary through their advocacy.
By contrast, the existing options for survivors’ legal services are law school clinics, legal aid organizations, law firm pro bono programs and passive pro bono technology solutions. While each of these are valuable resources, none of them go far enough to support the survivor on their own terms on their legal journey. For example, law firm pro bono programs often lack the in-house expertise to train their participating attorneys on trauma-informed lawyering and often do not have the competencies to properly screen survivors. While there are also some matching platforms and portals for pro bono placements on the market, they tend to come from for-profit sources that focus on the attorney experience at the expense of providing the individualized support that survivors require in order to successfully engage with and complete their legal journeys.
Describe in simple terms how and why you expect your solution to have an impact on the problem.
ALIGHT’s ultimate objective is that human trafficking survivors will be able to recover from their experience and realize their full potential with access to free legal resources. With legal needs addressed, survivors can have increased access to housing, employment, healthcare, accommodations, education, social services and more.
To accomplish this, ALIGHT leverages mobile technology and technology-facilitated networking to take the complexity out of a survivor or caseworker searching for a qualified and available attorney. As a result, survivors will have greater access to legal resources, attorneys will be more engaged with the issue of human trafficking and the needs of survivors and survivors will be in an improved socioeconomic position.
ALIGHT continues to invest in trauma-informed and survivor-centered processes to shape services that respond to survivors’ needs. We ask survivors to rate the impact of our services on their lives. As of February 15, 2024, the overall average response to the question “I am in a better position in my life because of the free legal assistance I received” was 4.5 (out of 5).
ALIGHT’s real-time needs-matching model opens possibilities for human trafficking, and human services more broadly, to receive efficient services. Survivors’ varied and urgent needs drive the recruitment of pro bono attorneys. By automating the matching of available resources to need on the mobile app, ALIGHT leverages under-utilized resources and saves precious time.
ALIGHT’s growth plan involves building larger, more diversified legal partnership networks in other hubs and linking those networks to provide multi-jurisdictional and comprehensive support.
When survivors have their legal needs addressed, not only do they feel empowered, but they are able to unlock access to a variety of resources to help them, and their families, recover.
What are your impact goals for your solution and how are you measuring your progress towards them?
We generate an ongoing feedback loop with the survivors served through surveys of advocates and vetted pro bono attorneys in our network who work with them. The results of the annual quality improvement feedback survey are then shared with our program partners. We ask for further insights and improvements on these results from the organization’s Survivor Advisory Council and Legal Advisory Council. As a result of this feedback, ALIGHT has instituted a number of changes. For example, ALIGHT no longer posts requests for out-of-network referrals to assist with cases outside of Colorado as the Colorado attorneys found it confusing. Additionally, advocates had indicated desire for more attorneys with family law expertise, resulting in ALIGHT focusing its recruitment efforts on this practice area.
As ALIGHT implements a growing program, the outcome we seek is to sustain our ability to meet the increasing demand for our services. ALIGHT has the following three goals and evaluation methods:
Goal 1: Survivors are legally empowered with free, direct legal services from vetted attorneys on legal needs across a range of legal areas. Success will be evaluated via:
- Survivor feedback: ALIGHT collects survivor data from information provided by community partners in surveys and obtained by Intake Advocate at screening.
- App analytics: ALIGHT monitors app activity for legal matters posted and connections made between attorneys and survivors.
- Self-reported attorney data and evaluation: ALIGHT collects attorney data on hours and hourly rate of attorneys providing free legal services; where not available, calculates market value of free legal services based on average time and hourly rates of previous services provided by attorneys in our program.
Goal 2: Attorneys with specialized skill-sets relevant to survivors' needs are engaged in helping survivors and their families. Success will be evaluated via:
- Program records: ALIGHT tracks information for every attorney who is vetted and on-boarded to our legal network, including referral source.
- App and intake analytics: ALIGHT collects information on types of legal assistance requested.
Goal 3: Survivors' lives are more economically stable and positively impacted as a result of free legal representation through ALIGHT. Success will be evaluated via:
- Survivor interviews: ALIGHT Intake Advocates conduct individual follow-up calls to survivors to determine the impact of legal services, their satisfaction with the process and whether additional legal barriers exist on a rolling basis.
- Community partner assessment: ALIGHT distributes survivor feedback through community partner completion surveys on a rolling basis.
- Attorney assessment: ALIGHT distributes legal case impact through attorney completion surveys on a rolling basis.
- Annual participant feedback survey: ALIGHT distributes participant feedback surveys (from community partners, Intake Advocate(s) and attorneys) on an annual basis.
ALIGHT gathers feedback from the users on an annual basis. For Calendar Year 2023, for the feedback question “On a scale of 1 (strongly disagree) to 5 (strongly agree), I believe the ALIGHT program offers an important service for trafficking survivors,” The average (weighted) Pro Bono Attorney respondent rating was 4.99 and the average advocate respondent rating was 5.
Describe the core technology that powers your solution.
ALIGHT’s core technology is a mobile application that matches attorneys to legal needs (which are posted by either a community partner or ALIGHT’s Intake Advocate, ensuring a survivor has support throughout the process).
Beyond this, even prior to the pandemic acceleration of remote work, ALIGHT has used technology in lieu of physical offices and meetings. From the beginning, this has allowed flexible collaboration with a diverse and professional talent pool that would be impossible without mobile communication technology. Communication through remote working technology has allowed ALIGHT to expand its network from Denver to across the United States and better recruit individuals requiring accommodations that make traditional in-person volunteering difficult (e.g. people with care-taking responsibilities, disabilities and/or economic constraints).
Which of the following categories best describes your solution?
A new business model or process that relies on technology to be successful
Please select the technologies currently used in your solution:
If your solution has a website, app, or social media handle, provide the link(s) here:
https://alightnet.org/
In which countries do you currently operate?
Which, if any, additional countries will you be operating in within the next year?
How many people work on your solution team?
1 full-time staff and 4 contractors
How long have you been working on your solution?
9 years
Tell us about how you ensure that your team is diverse, minimizes barriers to opportunity for staff, and provides a welcoming and inclusive environment for all team members.
ALIGHT is a woman and refugee-led nonprofit organization that is committed to providing an inclusive and welcoming environment for all of our team members that reflects our inclusive programmatic service structure. Team members include both paid staff and organizational volunteers. The Board of Directors has instituted a policy in addition to its Anti-Harassment and Anti-Discrimination Policy to support our small team as we grow. The Diversity of Culture Policy specifically addresses the organization’s affirmative commitment to a diversity of culture and creation of an inclusive work environment where “diversity of background, thought, style, culture and skill” is valued in support of individual performance and potential, as well as the strategic goals. This policy is reviewed and re-adopted by the Board of Directors on an annual basis, the most recent review having been completed on April 26, 2042. In addition, where team members have concerns, they can also employ the Whistleblower Policy, which elevates their complaints above the executive director.
By design, ALIGHT’s work and therefore our team invites diversity and relies on inter-disciplinary collaboration. ALIGHT’s team members come from various fields, including law, social work and marketing. As ALIGHT is a 100% remote organization, ALIGHT is able to conduct nation-wide searches for its open positions. As a result, ALIGHT’s team members live across the US in states that include CO, AL, TX, VT and MA. These interdisciplinary and geographic differences strengthen ALIGHT through a team of diverse experiences, skillsets and perspectives.
What is your plan for becoming financially sustainable, and what evidence can you provide that this plan has been successful so far?
ALIGHT’s fundraising model has historically been to blend and braid diverse sources of support to ensure sustainability and not be over-reliant on one source during market fluctuations. ALIGHT’s funders include long-standing relationships with seven private foundations, corporate giving programs, business sponsorships, local Denver victim assistance law enforcement (VALE) funds, individual donors, events, various in-kind technology services and professional volunteer support. When ALIGHT pursues both general operating and project-specific funds so that operating budget needs are met. ALIGHT does not employ a service fee model that charges survivors or advocates for our product and services to promote maximum access.
Lean and impactful, ALIGHT avoids traditional overhead costs such as rent, extensive marketing costs and top-heavy executive teams. We also benefit from the significant in-kind contributions of our technology partner and volunteers. ALIGHT’s expenses (e.g., staff and contract hires to support program expansion, conference participation, etc.) grow as ALIGHT reaches the next stage of service, such as the geographic expansion and technology improvement stage outlined in this proposal. While ALIGHT is pursuing federal grant funding to support programmatic aspects of the geographic expansion to Los Angeles/Southern California, it is rare to find funding for the technology aspects of our work.
Solution Team
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Marianna Kosharovsky Executive Director
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Our Organization
ALIGHT (Alliance to Lead Impact in Global Human Trafficking)