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VirtualCourthouse Oct. 2000; Issue
5.4 Over the past 5 years remarkable steps have been taken by the legal community
to join the INFORMATION AGE. The struggle has not been easy at times mainly
because of the professional necessity for stability - as the principle of stare
decisis demands. Change is also difficult because so much of today's work is
dependent on yesterday's work, which is almost always in paper form. The past
keeps reminding everyone of the difficulty and the significance of the need to
convert paper processes to electronic processes. During the last 12 months I have been traveling the country as Chief Industry
Advisor for CourtLink and JusticeLink in an effort to
help bring the INFORMATION AGE to the legal community. I have traveled over
100,000 miles, talked to lawyers, judges, clerks, administrators, law librarians
and technologists in California, Washington, Oregon, Iowa, Colorado, Arizona,
New Mexico, Texas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Louisiana,
Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, Connecticut, New York, West Virginia,
Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Florida, and Ohio. The amount of interest in the legal community about learning how to use
technology to further each person's mission is truly astounding. Just one small
example. The National Center for State Court's Institute for Court Management
presents an annual Electronic Filing Seminar - attendance in past years was
usually under 30 people. Last year they had to turn away over 100 applicants and
are planning an Electronic Filing super session later this year. See. www.ncsc.dni.us/ef2000.htm
. This article will address the questions: Where have we been? Where are we
now? and Where are we going? PAST Where have we been? An antiquated, slow and inefficient paper process has encumbered the past. There are, however, many factors that inhibit and deter a true coordination of all of the elements necessary to allow for the virtualization of the legal profession. The people involved in the legal process and traditional legal institutions, and the types of information needed are all variables that prevent the legal world from solving its problems by electronic means. The participants (the people) in the legal process are the largest barriers to virtualization of legal institutions. The litigants and their lawyers are a barrier because of their geographical diversity, political diversity and institutional diversity. They have competing goals and are usually participating in an adversarial capacity. The litigants do business and have disputes in different cities, different counties, different states, different regions and even different nations. No individual court, legislator or executive has authority to compel his or her methods of work in all venues. The courts where disputes are resolved are also geographically, politically
and institutionally diverse. There are federal courts, state courts and county
courts. Each court is created by a separate constitution and separate
legislation. Each court is also funded by a different executive/legislative
budget process. County courts in some states are funded entirely by the state
budget, while others are financed only by the county budget. Some courts even
receive funding by a combination of state and county budgets. It is said by some that " if you know one court, you know one court" and the same can be said about a law office, " if you know one law office, you know one law office" Although they all do the same thing -they do the same thing differently.The past has been dominated by the notions: 1. That legal institutions believe they are paper driven when in fact they are process driven; PRESENT Where are we now? Currently the legal community is slowly beginning to realize that their insistence on doing it "my way" is not only costing them in the court of public opinion, but also in the pocket book. The quickly evolving methods of doing eBusiness and eCommerce in other endeavors are also obviously having a favorable impact. Litigants and government policy makers are starting to insist that new solutions be used instead of the old costly paper process. There has also been a dramatic change in the state of readiness of both the courts and law firms of the nation. The remarkable acceleration of the state of readiness is attributable to several factors. According to Ronald W. Staudt, Professor of Law at Chicago-Kent College of Law who participated in the London ABA Annual Meeting session - Wiring the Legal Profession for the 21st Century -networked, e-mail ready computers on legal professionals desks has jumped from 7% in 1985 to 90% in2000. Likewise Internet use on legal professionals desktops has increased from 7% in 1995 to 90% in 2000. Concurrently, with the increase of computer availability is the release of money, emotion and time, which were encumbered by the Y2K problem and solutions. Along with the dramatic improvement and availability of technological infrastructure there has also evolved the beginnings of shared information through the World Wide Web-the Internet. Clients, lawyers and courts are also beginning to share information through web based technologies such as intranets and extranets The current age is occupied by: 1.Experimentation by pioneers; FUTURE Where we are going? The progression of the legal community into the INFORMATION AGE has followed the path of: i. building a technological infrastructure (the past); ii.sharing information (the present); and iii.managing knowledge (the future). Professor Richard Susskind, the author of The Future of Law http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0198764960/ The immediate future will demonstrate: 1. Public private partnership acceptance; This article first appeared on pro2net.com © 2000 ... by Arthur M.
Monty Ahalt |
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Email: amahalt@virtualcourthouse.com
Copyright © 2003 MontyAhalt.com |