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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Journals >> JILT 2000 (1) - O'Brien & Wilson URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/other/journals/JILT/2000/obrien_1.html Cite as: JILT 2000 (1) - O'Brien & Wilson |
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Eddie O'Brien and James Wilson
Ringtail Solutions
Australia
Delivered as a slide presentation at the 2nd AustLII Conference on LegalTech Conference in New York, 24-26 January 2000 .
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'I took the road less traveled and it made all the difference.' – Robert Frost.
Justice information systems are under going radical change. The legal industry is now embarked on a virtual journey on the information highway.
The opportunity of virtual court, hearing or deposition rooms is now available. It is now possible to create a Virtual or Cyber Court using a Cyber Court Book as the information management platform for future dispute resolution.
2.1 The Core Elements of a Case
2.2 Reviewing Current Justice System
The majority of current courts:
'Courts are inundated with paper, which interferes with their core mission - to resolve disputes .'
3. What is the Cyber Court Book?
The Cyber Court Book is a multimedia electronic filing cabinet that integrates the main elements of the court record including motions, pleadings, realtime and historic transcript, depositions, electronic evidence, private and public information stores, links to online legal sites, calendaring and messaging.
This electronic filing cabinet should be accessible via secure and reliable access. The Cyber Court Book should allow collaboration, integration and should not be machine dependant.
All of that has changed with the introduction of the power of the World Wide Web, the Internet and Justice Information portals.
4. What is a Justice Information Portal?
'A justice information portal is an information system that provides unified access to a variety of legal-relevant information.
Justice information portals offer a means by which today's legal information chaos can be organised.
Using them, legal practitioners and participants can act as knowledge workers and better navigate through the myriad streams of information and more efficiently transfer knowledge substance and methodology to others.'
5. History of Court Information Management in the Court or Deposition Room
In the past, court systems and litigation support have been managed with a patchwork of unrelated programs.
Court filing was paper based or at best a complex computer system. Evidence was managed through a custom-built database application with a graphics program bolted on just to view images. Realtime transcript required a special program dedicated to one task. Historical transcript and depositions required a text retrieval program. Calendaring, payments and messaging were different again.
All of these programs had to be installed and maintained on each client machine. Each program had a unique interface that needed separate mastering and few if any of the programs were integrated with each other, provided collaboration between users or sophisticated remote access facilities.
Hardware 'Islands' – Document Cameras, |
Electronic Data 'Islands' – Transcript & Exhibits, |
Table 1: Islands of Information
7. The Next Challenge
'The seamless integration of software and hardware based information into an easily accessible knowledge management form.'
The new electronic file maintained within the Cyber Court Book could contain a variety of digital material related to a legal proceeding including:
9. Advanced Dispute Resolution - Enablers
10. Benefits of using a Web Browser
The Cyber Court Book would use a Web Browser as the metaphor of access:
11. How is the Cyber Court Book Accessed?
The Web Browser can allow secure, remote, collaborative and reliable access from any location.
The diagram below outlines the various users accessing the virtual court information either locally in the court or deposition room, over virtual private network behind secure firewalls or by secure modem connections all using the Web Browser.
Figure 1: The Cyber Court Portal
The Cyber Court Book should work the way you want to by providing access to all the information contained on file in the one screen, or for the power user, create multiple views by opening several screens at once.
Move between the exhibits and transcripts, review associated materials or your own private folders of information; research the law, check the calendar or message boards or simply watch the realtime transcript and realtime evidence feeds or do all at the same time.
Links to the multimedia electronic filing cabinet for access to other elements of the court record including motions, pleadings, realtime and historic transcript, depositions, electronic evidence, private and public information stores, links to online legal sites, calendaring and messaging.
Figure 2: The Cyber Court Book
13. Workflow in the Court or Deposition Room
The Cyber Court Book could include facilities for management and control of the proceedings within the court, hearing room or deposition.
Legal teams could collaborate, locally or remotely, whilst working in private workgroups.
The Cyber Court Book should provide for simple or sophisticated access scenarios including:
'I took the virtual road to Justice Information Systems and it made all the difference.' - Eddie O'Brien
Citation: O'Brien E, 'Virtual Travel on the Justice Information Highway', Conference Paper, 2000 (1) The Journal of Information, Law and Technology (JILT). <http://elj.warwick.ac.uk/jilt/00-1/obrien.html>. New citation as at 1/1/04: < http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/law/elj/jilt/2000_1/austlii/obrien/>