Then again, I'll defer to Professor Bala because he's studied this more than I, but the way the courts are set up, the unified family courts are supposed to be more welcoming, as it were. They're set up with support systems that would allow for either parent, or either person going through a divorce, to have more information, to have information sessions, to go through mediation, and to have a more understanding system that is supposed to address some of those issues. It doesn't just include the judges. Part of this this is about educating staff members, etc., court clerk staff members, to be able to provide information to help them.
Professor Bala mentioned the issue of limited retainers, meaning having lawyers helping for a limited period who can assist in the information stage if someone can't afford a lawyer. Ultimately, it's a system that, hopefully, with educated judges in that area, can balance those circumstances where one spouse has representation and one doesn't. That's a difficult issue because these are fairness issues. It's the biblical Solomonic task of dividing things, and the judges are going to have to do it. It's a very difficult task. The hope is that's what it is.
I suspect Professor Bala has more research to respond with than I.