Published Issues

2004 Symposium: Technology, Values, and the Justice System

The Washington Law Review's Technology, Values, and the Justice System symposium explored developments in information technologies, the use of such technologies in the justice system, and the broader societal ramifications of such use. The conference, held at the University of Washington's School of Law, involved an exchange of ideas, theories, and opinions between influential leaders and scholars, judges, lawyers, legal consumers, lawmakers, technologists, and members of the law school and information school communities.

Symposium Topics

Articles

Technology, Values and the Justice System: Introduction
Gerry Alexander

Washington State Access to Justice Technology Principles

Potential Washington State General Court Rule: Access to Justice and Technology

Technology and the Washington State Administrative Process—Some Preliminary Notes
William R. Andersen

Internet and the Justice System
Vinton G. Cerf

Towards a Theory of Legitimate Access: Morally Legitimate Authority and the Right of Citizens to Access the Civil Justice System
Kenneth E. Himma

Technology, Values and the Justice System: The Evolution of the Access to Justice Technology Bill of Rights
Donald J Horowitz

Conceptualizing the Right of Access to Technnology
Morton J. Horwitz

Privacy as Contextual Integrity
Helen Nissenbaum

Government-to-Citizen Online Dispute Resolution: A Preliminary Inquiry
Anita Ramasastry
Rise of the Machines: Justice Information Systems and the Question of Public Access to Court Records over the Internet
Gregory M. Silverman

Designing an Accessible, Technology-Driven Justice System: An Exercise in Testing the Access to Justice Technology Bill of Rights
Judge T.W. Small
Robert Boiko
Richard Zorza


The Common Law Process: A New Look at an Ancient Value Delivery System
Judge Dennis J. Sweeney
Crafting a License to Know from a Privilege to Access
Jane K. Winn

Online Court Records: Balancing Judicial Accountability and Privacy in an Age of Electronic Information
Peter A. Winn

The End of Technology: A Polemic Louis E. Wolcher

Some Reflections on Long-Term Lessons and Implications of the Access to Justice Technology Bill of Rights Process

Richard Zorza

Notes & Comments

How to Keep Your Attorney from Trashing Your Identity: Malpractice as Backstop Protection for Clients under the United States Judicial Conference's Policy on Electronic Court Records
Michael Caughey

Balancing Consumer Interests in Digital Age: A New Approach To Regulating the Unauthorized Practice of Law
Cristina L. Underwood


 
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