CaseAid has been selected as a recipient of a $40,000 grant from the Global Technology Industry Association (GTIA), as part of its 2025 charitable giving program, which distributed $1.91 million to organizations advancing global impact through technology.
The Global Technology Industry Association is a global organization supporting initiatives that use technology to drive meaningful social impact. CaseAid joins a cohort of globally recognized nonprofits supported by GTIA, including organizations such as the Roger Federer Foundation.
The grant comes at an important moment for the organization, as it begins piloting its virtual legal clinic platform with legal aid organizations, courts, and law schools across the United States.
Access to justice remains one of the most persistent and under-addressed systemic challenges. In the United States alone, more than 80% of the civil legal needs of low-income Americans go unmet. Globally, the scale is even greater.
CaseAid was founded on a simple but urgent insight: the problem is not a shortage of lawyers, but a lack of infrastructure.
The organization is building a digital platform that enables legal aid organizations to operate virtual clinics at scale. Through a unified system, clinics can onboard clients, match them with lawyers, coordinate consultations, and manage operations without the constraints of physical space. The goal is to expand capacity, reduce cost, and ensure legal help can reach far more people.
Support from GTIA will accelerate the development and deployment of high-volume virtual clinic pilots, designed to increase the reach of nonprofit legal services without increasing overhead.
The grant also comes as CaseAid expands its founding team.
Ben Jackson, co-founder of Upsolve, has joined CaseAid, bringing deep experience in building technology that expands access to justice at scale. At Upsolve, Jackson helped create one of the most impactful access-to-justice platforms in the United States, helping Americans eliminate over $1 billion in debt through free digital legal tools.
His experience reinforces CaseAid’s belief that thoughtfully designed technology can deliver meaningful legal outcomes at scale.
“Upsolve showed what’s possible when technology meets access to justice,” said Jackson. “I’m excited about the opportunity CaseAid has to build a critical piece of infrastructure to help legal aid organizations reach far more people.”
CaseAid also recently participated in the Legal Services Corporation’s 2026 Innovations in Technology Conference, where leaders across the legal aid and legal technology sectors convened to address the growing justice gap. The conversations reinforced the need for solutions that can operate at scale, rather than incremental improvements to existing systems.
“Access to justice should not depend on geography, income, or circumstance,” said Amber Bobin, Co-Founder and CEO of CaseAid. “With the support of GTIA, we are accelerating the development of infrastructure that allows legal aid organizations to reach more people, more effectively.”
Established as a nonprofit in the United States and Australia, and expanding into the United Kingdom, CaseAid is positioning itself as a foundational layer for modern justice delivery.
