In today\u27s world an increasing proportion of the information subject to discovery under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is stored electronically, rather than on traditional media. Despite this development, there has been no widespread debate as to whether the federal discovery rules adequately address the difficult issues that frequently arise during discovery of electronically-stored Information. Rather, practitioners and judges have assumed that the same rules applicable to the discovety of traditional forms of evidence are easily applied to electronic data. Our overarching concern is the continuing validity of that assumption. This Article focuses specifically on how discovery of electronic evidence proceeds under Rule 34. We con...
Discovery involving electronically stored information (ESI) in federal court litigation has been a m...
Computers are the cynosure of American society. As a result, most information is stored electronical...
This Note explores the problems that the increase in electronic data discovery has created in litiga...
[Excerpt] “The increase in e-discovery, e-discovery‘s impact on litigation, and the courts‘ unavoida...
Third-year student Aaron Walter\u27s award-winning article on electronic discovery and new amendment...
In recent years, electronically stored information (ESI) has begun to play an increasingly important...
The U.S. Judicial Conference Advisory Committee on Civil Rules recommended a package of proposed ame...
The burdens and challenges of discovery—especially electronic discovery—are usually associated with ...
The 2006 amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which were enacted to address the poten...
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (the Rules) have long sought to limit abuses that developed und...
In 1938, the passage of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) established discovery practice. ...
In the twenty-first century, persons involved in the legal profession will be forced to confront tec...
The newly revised Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and developments under the Federal Rules of Evide...
The impact of the technological revolution on the operation of the discovery system in the federal c...
This Note explains what parties have to do to meet the requirements for default production of electr...
Discovery involving electronically stored information (ESI) in federal court litigation has been a m...
Computers are the cynosure of American society. As a result, most information is stored electronical...
This Note explores the problems that the increase in electronic data discovery has created in litiga...
[Excerpt] “The increase in e-discovery, e-discovery‘s impact on litigation, and the courts‘ unavoida...
Third-year student Aaron Walter\u27s award-winning article on electronic discovery and new amendment...
In recent years, electronically stored information (ESI) has begun to play an increasingly important...
The U.S. Judicial Conference Advisory Committee on Civil Rules recommended a package of proposed ame...
The burdens and challenges of discovery—especially electronic discovery—are usually associated with ...
The 2006 amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which were enacted to address the poten...
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (the Rules) have long sought to limit abuses that developed und...
In 1938, the passage of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) established discovery practice. ...
In the twenty-first century, persons involved in the legal profession will be forced to confront tec...
The newly revised Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and developments under the Federal Rules of Evide...
The impact of the technological revolution on the operation of the discovery system in the federal c...
This Note explains what parties have to do to meet the requirements for default production of electr...
Discovery involving electronically stored information (ESI) in federal court litigation has been a m...
Computers are the cynosure of American society. As a result, most information is stored electronical...
This Note explores the problems that the increase in electronic data discovery has created in litiga...