Legal Tech and the Future of Civil Justice
Editat de David Freeman Engstromen Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 feb 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781009255356
ISBN-10: 1009255355
Pagini: 300
Dimensiuni: 238 x 159 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.72 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1009255355
Pagini: 300
Dimensiuni: 238 x 159 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.72 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Introduction: civil justice at the crossroads David Freeman Engstrom; Part I. Legal Tech and the Innovation Ecosystem: 1. The future of American legal tech: regulation, culture, markets Benjamin H. Barton; 2. Lawtech: levelling the playing field in legal services? John Armour and Mari Sako; 3. Natural language processing in legal tech Julian Nyarko and Jens Frankenreiter; Part II. Legal Tech, Litigation, and the Adversarial System: 4. Remote testimonial fact-finding Renee L. Danser, D. James Greiner, Elizabeth Guo, and Erik Koltun; 5. Gamesmanship in modern discovery tech Neel Guha, Peter Henderson, and Diego A. Zambrano; 6. Legal tech and the litigation playing field David Freeman Engstrom and Nora Freeman Engstrom; 7. Litigation outcome prediction, access to justice, and legal endogeneity Charlotte S. Alexander; 8. Towards the participatory MDL: a low-tech step to promote litigant autonomy Todd Venook and Nora Freeman Engstrom; Part III. Legal Tech and Access to Justice: 9. The supply and demand of legal help on the Internet Margaret Hagan; 10. Digital inequalities and access to justice: dialing into Zoom court unrepresented Victor D. Quintanilla, Kurt Hugenberg, Margaret Hagan, Amy Gonzales, Ryan Hutchings, and Nedim Yel; 11. Online dispute resolution and the end of adversarial justice? Norman W. Spaulding; 12. Using ODR platforms to level the playing field: improving pro se litigation through ODR design J. J. Prescott; Part IV. Courts, Data, and Civil Justice: 13. The disruption we needed: COVID-19, court technology, and access to justice Bridget M. McCormack; 14. Free PACER Jonah B. Gelbach; 15. Technological challenges facing the judiciary Albert H. Yoon; 16. The civil justice data gap Tanina Rostain and Amy O'Hara.
Recenzii
'Engstrom has convened an extraordinary group of scholars around the urgent, vital topic of how we can and should mobilize legal technology to improve access to justice. The result is a clear-eyed, relentlessly data-driven analysis of a pressing national problem - and with balanced, constructive suggestions for legal reform and policy change.' Daniel B. Rodriguez, Northwestern University
'A welcome corrective to a conversation about legal technology often dominated by magical thinking, whether cheery tales about ever-expanding openness, access, and efficiency, or darker ones about humans' obsolescence. Legal tech will continue to transform legal and court practice in complex ways. Nothing is inevitable here, neither access nor exclusion. This book illuminates opportunities to shape the transformation in positive directions that further justice.' Rebecca L. Sandefur, Arizona State University
'This is an invaluable collection of scholarly and insightful essays. As civil litigation, the world over, becomes increasingly costly, time-consuming, combative, and complex, the authors show - with enthusiasm and yet realism - how technology might help both streamline and transform dispute resolution processes. Mandatory reading for litigators and judges.' Richard Susskind, Society for Computers and Law
'A welcome corrective to a conversation about legal technology often dominated by magical thinking, whether cheery tales about ever-expanding openness, access, and efficiency, or darker ones about humans' obsolescence. Legal tech will continue to transform legal and court practice in complex ways. Nothing is inevitable here, neither access nor exclusion. This book illuminates opportunities to shape the transformation in positive directions that further justice.' Rebecca L. Sandefur, Arizona State University
'This is an invaluable collection of scholarly and insightful essays. As civil litigation, the world over, becomes increasingly costly, time-consuming, combative, and complex, the authors show - with enthusiasm and yet realism - how technology might help both streamline and transform dispute resolution processes. Mandatory reading for litigators and judges.' Richard Susskind, Society for Computers and Law
Descriere
Provides a comprehensive, first-of-its-kind analysis of the impact of new digital technologies on the future of the civil justice system.