eAccess to Justice /
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....
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autores principales: | , , |
Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Baltimore, Maryland :
Project Muse,
2019
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Colección: | Law, technology, and media.
Book collections on Project MUSE. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- 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.