Video chat has grown increasingly popular in the United States, but it often comes under fire for poor image and sound quality. If federal agencies begin conducting administrative proceedings using videoconference technology, will the same quality issues that interrupt personal conversations also obstruct open government? According to a recent report from the Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS) and the Center for Legal and Court Technology (CLCT) at William and Mary Law School, this question is worth answering because of technology’s clear “potential for increased access to justice.” The report concludes that videoconference technologies can bring government to the people in an important, new way by making public particip...
Cameras are an understandable yet inapt target for Supreme Court Justices apprehensive about televis...
As new technology is developed and older technology upgraded, people find new efficiency and flexibi...
Videoconferencing technology is becoming a significant component of eJustice. Across the justice sys...
For a century and a half, federal agencies had two options when it came to adjudication: bring the p...
Courts are experimenting with new technologies in response to increasingly crowded dockets. Videoc...
As part of a national effort to improve efficiency in court procedures, the American Bar Association...
Videoconferencing has generated ambivalence in the legal community. Some have heralded its promise o...
With the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, federal and state courts and federal adjudicatory agencies...
Videoconferencing has generated ambivalence in the legal community. Some have heralded its promise o...
In an effort to provide affordable access to the appellate process, the Minnesota Court of Appeals h...
The COVID-19 pandemic forced courthouses around the country to shutter their doors to in-person hear...
This Article addresses the increasing use of videoconferencing to avoid bringing criminal defendants...
Back in 2000, videoconference systems were introduced in criminal courts in England and Wales so tha...
Three cases were undertaken to assess perceptions and practices regarding the use and non-use of vid...
International audienceVideoconference in courtrooms setting cannot be reduced to a point-to-point se...
Cameras are an understandable yet inapt target for Supreme Court Justices apprehensive about televis...
As new technology is developed and older technology upgraded, people find new efficiency and flexibi...
Videoconferencing technology is becoming a significant component of eJustice. Across the justice sys...
For a century and a half, federal agencies had two options when it came to adjudication: bring the p...
Courts are experimenting with new technologies in response to increasingly crowded dockets. Videoc...
As part of a national effort to improve efficiency in court procedures, the American Bar Association...
Videoconferencing has generated ambivalence in the legal community. Some have heralded its promise o...
With the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, federal and state courts and federal adjudicatory agencies...
Videoconferencing has generated ambivalence in the legal community. Some have heralded its promise o...
In an effort to provide affordable access to the appellate process, the Minnesota Court of Appeals h...
The COVID-19 pandemic forced courthouses around the country to shutter their doors to in-person hear...
This Article addresses the increasing use of videoconferencing to avoid bringing criminal defendants...
Back in 2000, videoconference systems were introduced in criminal courts in England and Wales so tha...
Three cases were undertaken to assess perceptions and practices regarding the use and non-use of vid...
International audienceVideoconference in courtrooms setting cannot be reduced to a point-to-point se...
Cameras are an understandable yet inapt target for Supreme Court Justices apprehensive about televis...
As new technology is developed and older technology upgraded, people find new efficiency and flexibi...
Videoconferencing technology is becoming a significant component of eJustice. Across the justice sys...