Journal of Judicial Administration update: Vol 31 Pt 3
By journalalerts on March 29, 2022
Posted In: Journal of Judicial Administration (JJA) Tagged: articles Artificial Intelligence (AI) applications automation of administration of justice Benjamin L Spivak Bridgette Toy-Cronin Catriona Mackenzie challenges of mainstream courts considerable issues displayed by AI Danielle Moon Denise Meyerson Diane Sivasubramaniam easy-to-use court forms fair treatment in interactions with legal and other authorities form design history of the reform development and withdrawal how Tribunal Members practice legal rules of procedural fairness interview and survey of Victorian magistrates regarding their use and experience of judicial supervision JJA judicial oversight Kalliopi Terzidou Lessons from a Failed Court Reform: The Cautionary Tale of the 2009 New Zealand District Courts Rules Magistrates' Experiences of Judicial Supervision in Mainstream Courts Michael D Trood move to evidence-based civil justice reform New Zealand Rules Committee normative dimensions of procedural fairness opaqueness and unfair bias due to defective designing of algorithms opportunities and risks of AI technology for court users opportunities for the improvement of access to courts people's procedural fairness judgements problem-solving court proposed and developed applications of AI by European judiciaries under the right to a fair trial social psychology literature Stephane Shepherd testing and evaluation of reforms The Relational Dimensions of Procedural Fairness in a Tribunal Setting The Use of Artificial Intelligence in the Judiciary and Its Compliance with the Right to a Fair Trial Therese MacDermott