Principles, procedure, and justice : essays in honour of Adrian Zuckerman / edited by Rabeea Assy, Andrew Higgins.
2020
N350.A1 PRI 2020
Available at Brisbane
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Items
Details
Title
Principles, procedure, and justice : essays in honour of Adrian Zuckerman / edited by Rabeea Assy, Andrew Higgins.
Edition
1st edition
ISBN
9780198850410 (hbk.)
Imprint
Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2020.
Language
English
Description
xii, 290 p. ; 25 cm
Call Number
N350.A1 PRI 2020
Summary
This collection is in honour of Adrian Zuckerman, Emeritus Professor of Civil Procedure at the University of Oxford. Bringing together a distinguished group of judges and academics to reflect on the impact of his work on our understanding of civil procedure and evidence today. An internationally renowned scholar, Professor Zuckerman has dedicated his professional life to the law of evidence and civil procedure, drawing attention to the principles and policies that shape litigation practice and their wider social impact. His pioneering scholarship is admired by the judiciary and the academy and has influenced several major reforms of the civil justice system including the Woolf Reforms that heralded the introduction of the Civil Procedure Rules, and Lord Justice Jackson's Review of Civil Litigation Costs. His work has also informed law reform bodies and courts in other jurisdictions. Building upon Professor Zuckerman's work, the contributors address outstanding problems in the field of civil procedure and evidence, and in keeping with Adrian's record of always exploring new areas, the book includes chapters on the prospects for a digital justice system, including the new online court being developed in England and the potential role of algorithms in the court room. - Publisher's website.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references.
Formatted Contents Note
1. A man for all processes
Part I: The changing face of evidence law
2. Defining the scope of the hearsay rule in criminal cases: a comparative perspective
3. Common law principles and the expression and use of forensic evidence in criminal cases
4. Adrian Zuckerman's new evidence scholarship
Part II: The future of judging
5. How judges decide
6. The bright but modest potential of algorithms in the courtroom
Part III: Culture, technology, and a new paradigm for proportionality
7. The civil online court in England
8. Compliance problems and digitizing case management in England and Wales
9. Taking seriously affordability, expedition, and integrity in adjudication
Part IV: Funding justice
10. Funding civil litigation through legal expenses insurance in Germany
11. Controlling recoverable costs
12. Just costs
Part V: History of procedure and procedural powers
13. Does procedural mean trans-substantive? A historical and normative analysis of English civil procedure rules
14. Inherent jurisdiction and the limits of civil procedure.
Part I: The changing face of evidence law
2. Defining the scope of the hearsay rule in criminal cases: a comparative perspective
3. Common law principles and the expression and use of forensic evidence in criminal cases
4. Adrian Zuckerman's new evidence scholarship
Part II: The future of judging
5. How judges decide
6. The bright but modest potential of algorithms in the courtroom
Part III: Culture, technology, and a new paradigm for proportionality
7. The civil online court in England
8. Compliance problems and digitizing case management in England and Wales
9. Taking seriously affordability, expedition, and integrity in adjudication
Part IV: Funding justice
10. Funding civil litigation through legal expenses insurance in Germany
11. Controlling recoverable costs
12. Just costs
Part V: History of procedure and procedural powers
13. Does procedural mean trans-substantive? A historical and normative analysis of English civil procedure rules
14. Inherent jurisdiction and the limits of civil procedure.
Record Appears in