China News Service, Jilin Lishu, March 6th (Tan Weiqi Liu Dong) On the 6th, Lishu County, Jilin Province was warm and harmonious.

Spring plowing is just around the corner, and local farmers are starting to prepare for plowing.

In recent days, Wang He has been busy spreading the law to the villagers, reminding them to buy seeds and fertilizers through formal channels, and pay attention to the safety of agricultural machinery.

  Wang He is a post judge in the Guojiadian Court of the People's Court of Lishu County. Her daily work includes going to the countryside to popularize the law, pre-litigation mediation, serving legal documents, and holding court sessions.

Wang He, who has short hair and a gentle smile on his face, has been rooted in the grassroots for ten years. He has taken both legal and emotional principles into consideration, and has devoted his youth to mediating disputes at the grassroots level.

  Lishu is a typical large agricultural county in Jilin Province, and the main crop is corn.

In 2020, Wang He created the "Golden Corn Mediation Studio" based on the local regional characteristics, and set up the work in the mode of "1+1+N" (one judge + one full-time mediator in court + N grid members) The team provides free legal publicity, legal consultation, litigation guidance, mediation, and post-judgment Q & A and other convenient judicial services for the masses.

Wang He, who has short hair and a gentle smile on his face, has been rooted in the grassroots for ten years.

Photo provided by the interviewee

  "The purpose of establishing the mediation studio is to better provide judicial services to the villagers while building the brand of the court's source of litigation governance work." Wang He said.

  "By promoting the "Law of the People's Republic of China on the Protection of Black Land", villagers can better realize the importance of protecting black land. Through litigation guidance, villagers can be guided to solve land problems through legal means." Wang He said, mediation The land disputes of the good folks are also to reduce the burden of litigation for the rural people, and finally achieve the conclusion of the case, the matter, and the people.

  While mediating disputes offline, Wang He is also keen on popularizing the law online.

She is committed to delivering concise and easy-to-understand "rule of law fast food" to netizens across the country through the Internet.

  In a way that is popular with the public, Wang He recorded common legal issues such as divorce, private lending, and land disputes in easy-to-understand language, and recorded a "legal topic" law popularization video to promote legal publicity.

  In order to let the masses experience the warmth of justice, Wang He also joined hands with local civil affairs, women's federations, trade unions and other organizations and departments to launch social charity fundraising, carried out more than 30 activities, and helped more than 100 rural children and the elderly.

  Under the influence of Wang He, court officers and police officers voluntarily joined the caring team she created to jointly carry out services such as door-to-door case filing, mediation, circuit trial, and festival condolences, and convey judicial care.

  Talking about the advantages of female judges in popularizing the law and mediating disputes, Wang He has a lot of experience.

"Female judges are more gentle in character and more delicate in their approach to issues. They can quickly open up the psychological defense of the parties and communicate with the parties more easily." Wang He said that she will stick to the front line of legal popularization in the countryside and be the "confidant" of the people.

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