eAccess to Justice / edited by Karim Benyekhlef, Jane Bailey, Jacquelyn Burkell, and Fabien Gelinas.

Part I of this work focuses on the ways in which digitization projects can affect fundamental justice principles. It examines claims that technology will improve justice system efficiency and offers a model for evaluating e-justice systems that incorporates a broader range of justice system values....

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Place / Publishing House:Baltimore, Maryland : : Project Muse,, 2019
©2019
Year of Publication:2016
2019
Language:English
Series:Law, technology, and media.
Physical Description:1 online resource (vi, 412 pages.)
Notes:Will digitization projects affect fundamental justice principles? Part I examines claims that technology will improve justice system efficiency with an emphasis on the complicated relationship between privacy and transparency. Part II examines the implementation of technologies in the justice system and the associated challenges and emphasizes that these technologies should be implemented with care to ensure the best possible outcome for access to a fair and effective justice system. The chapters in Part III adopt the standpoints of sociology, political theory and legal theory and provide a unique and valuable framework for thinking with the required sophistication about legal change. (Description from UO Press)
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Table of Contents:
  • Age of efficiency / Jane Bailey
  • Cyberjustice and international development : reducing the gap between promises and accomplishments / Renaud Beauchard
  • Evaluating e-justice : the design of an assessment framework for e-justice systems / Giampiero Lupo
  • The role of courts in assisting individuals in realizing their s. 2(b) right to information about court proceedings / Graham Reynolds
  • Privacy v. transparency : how remote access to court records forces us to re-examine our fundamental values / Nicolas Vermeys
  • ATJ technology principles : access to and delivery of Justice / the Honorable Donald Horowitz
  • Empowerment, technology, and family law / Sherry MacLennan
  • The case for courtroom technology competence as an ethical duty for litigators / Amy Salyzyn
  • Tablets in the jury room : enhancing performance while undermining fairness? / David Tait and Meredith Rossner
  • The old...and the new? Elements for a general theory of institutional change : the case of paperless justice / Pierre Noreau
  • Cyberjustice and ethical perspectives of procedural law / Daniel Weinstock
  • Three trade-offs to efficient dispute resolution / Clement Camion
  • The electronic process in the Brazilian judicial system : much more than an option, it is a solution / Katia Balbino de Carvalho Ferreira
  • Access to justice and technology : European perspective / Xandra Kramer.