Editorial & Review Policy

How Lawfe's guides are written, reviewed, and corrected.

Reviewed by Dr. Anthony El Marii & Dr. Michel Dibal — international lawyers (PhD). Last reviewed 9 July 2026.

Lawfe publishes general legal information for readers in many countries. Because legal content affects real decisions, we hold it to a clear set of editorial standards. This page explains who prepares and reviews our guides, what our content is meant to do, how we keep it accurate, and how corrections work.

Who writes and reviews our content?

Lawfe's guides are prepared editorially by our team and then reviewed by Lawfe's legal review panel for general accuracy and clarity before publication. The panel is made up of Dr. Anthony El Marii and Dr. Michel Dibal, both international lawyers holding a PhD in Law. Their review focuses on whether a guide describes legal concepts correctly at a general, cross-jurisdiction level and whether the explanation is clear enough for a non-lawyer to use.

Reviewed guides carry a "Last reviewed" date so you can see when the content was last checked.

What is our content — and what is it not?

Our guides provide general legal information written in plain language for readers across many jurisdictions. They explain common legal concepts, typical processes, key terms, and the kinds of questions worth asking before you act.

Our content is not legal advice. Reading a Lawfe guide, or using the Lawfe app, does not create an attorney–client relationship. Laws differ significantly between countries and change over time, and no general guide can account for the facts of your specific situation. For decisions that affect your rights, money, family, or liberty, consult a qualified legal consultant in your jurisdiction. You can read our full disclaimer for details.

What are our accuracy standards?

Every guide we publish is held to the following standards:

  • Multi-jurisdiction generality. We describe how legal concepts commonly work, and we avoid presenting any single country's rules as universal. Where something varies by country or jurisdiction, we say so and recommend confirming with a qualified legal consultant.
  • No invented specifics. We do not fabricate statutes, section numbers, case law, statistics, or deadlines. If we cannot state something reliably at a general level, we leave it out.
  • Plain language. We define legal terms when we use them and prefer everyday wording over jargon, without sacrificing precision.
  • Dated reviews. Guides display a "Last reviewed" date, and we revisit content periodically to keep it current at the general level we cover.

How do corrections work?

If you believe something we published is inaccurate, unclear, or out of date, you can report it by emailing lawfeapp@outlook.com or using our report form. We investigate every report. When we confirm an error, we correct the guide and update its "Last reviewed" date.

How are translations handled?

Lawfe is available in English, Arabic, French, and Spanish. Our Arabic, French, and Spanish content is produced with machine-assisted translation and then reviewed for accuracy and readability. Because nuances can shift in translation, the English version is authoritative for our legal pages, including this policy and our disclaimer. If a translated page appears to conflict with the English version, the English version controls.

How does AI fit into our content?

Lawfe's product uses AI to answer legal questions and to connect users with a network of verified legal consultants. Answers generated inside the app are AI-generated and carry the same disclaimer that applies to all of our content: they are general information, not legal advice.

The guides on this website are different. They are editorial content — planned, written, and reviewed through the process described on this page — not auto-generated pages produced at scale. We use AI as a drafting and research aid where it helps, but every published guide passes through human editorial preparation and review by our legal panel before it goes live.