Videoconferencing has generated ambivalence in the legal community. Some have heralded its promise of unprecedented access to justice, expecialy for geographicaly remote communities. Others, however, have questioned whether videoconferencing undermines fairness. The authors explore the impl\u27cations of videoconferencing through the case study of the Ontario Landlord and Tenant Tribunal, which is one of the busiest adjudicative bodies in Canada. This anaysis hig hghts concerns both with videoconferendng in princp4 and in practice. While such concerns traditionally have been the province of public administration, the authors argue that a tribunals allocation of resources and the suffidengy of its budget are also core concerns of administrat...
Research on videoconferencing (VC) in interpreting is flourishing, although in conference settings t...
This Comment reports the findings of a research project on the video deposition\u27s place in litiga...
The purpose of the article is to undertake a critical examination of a new audiovisual form of jud...
Videoconferencing has generated ambivalence in the legal community. Some have heralded its promise o...
Videoconferencing has generated ambivalence in the legal community. Some have heralded its promise o...
Video chat has grown increasingly popular in the United States, but it often comes under fire for po...
The state of courtroom technology in Ontario is increasingly capturing the attention of both the pub...
In his 2004 Horace E Read Memorial Lecture, David Mullan assesses the impact of the due process exp...
Courts are experimenting with new technologies in response to increasingly crowded dockets. Videoc...
As new technology is developed and older technology upgraded, people find new efficiency and flexibi...
Claimants who come to administrative tribunals in Canada, as elsewhere, expecting a convenient forum...
This research was made possible through the Australian Research Council Linkage Project "Gateways to...
Videoconferencing technology is becoming a significant component of eJustice. Across the justice sys...
The corpus we want to examine is a very specific and rather exceptional one: it is an authentic vide...
With in-person hearings limited during the COVID-19 pandemic, many courts pivoted to proceedings hel...
Research on videoconferencing (VC) in interpreting is flourishing, although in conference settings t...
This Comment reports the findings of a research project on the video deposition\u27s place in litiga...
The purpose of the article is to undertake a critical examination of a new audiovisual form of jud...
Videoconferencing has generated ambivalence in the legal community. Some have heralded its promise o...
Videoconferencing has generated ambivalence in the legal community. Some have heralded its promise o...
Video chat has grown increasingly popular in the United States, but it often comes under fire for po...
The state of courtroom technology in Ontario is increasingly capturing the attention of both the pub...
In his 2004 Horace E Read Memorial Lecture, David Mullan assesses the impact of the due process exp...
Courts are experimenting with new technologies in response to increasingly crowded dockets. Videoc...
As new technology is developed and older technology upgraded, people find new efficiency and flexibi...
Claimants who come to administrative tribunals in Canada, as elsewhere, expecting a convenient forum...
This research was made possible through the Australian Research Council Linkage Project "Gateways to...
Videoconferencing technology is becoming a significant component of eJustice. Across the justice sys...
The corpus we want to examine is a very specific and rather exceptional one: it is an authentic vide...
With in-person hearings limited during the COVID-19 pandemic, many courts pivoted to proceedings hel...
Research on videoconferencing (VC) in interpreting is flourishing, although in conference settings t...
This Comment reports the findings of a research project on the video deposition\u27s place in litiga...
The purpose of the article is to undertake a critical examination of a new audiovisual form of jud...