The courts, the remote hearing and the pandemic: From action to reflection

M. Legg, A. Song
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, courts around the world rapidly shifted to remote hearings. Balancing public health directives with the need to continue upholding the rule of law, what followed was the largest, unforeseen mass-pilot of remote hearings across the world. For courts this was necessarily a time of action, not reflection. However, after having maintained court operations, it is now necessary to reflect on the experience of remote courts and their users during an otherwise unprecedented situation. Unlike previous iterations of remote hearings, the COVID-19 experience was fully remote – whereby all participants took part in the hearing remotely. The difficulty is until now, almost no prior empirical data has existed on this type of fully remote hearing with the majority of previous research focused on the use of audiovisual links (‘AVLs’) to facilitate partially remote appearances within courtrooms. To bridge the research and data gap on fully remote hearings, this article draws on the previous body of literature to both examine the COVID-19 experience, and to assist in guiding future research and use of remote hearings. © 2021, University of New South Wales Law Journal. All rights reserved.
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法院、远程听证和大流行病:从行动到反思
随着新冠肺炎疫情的爆发,世界各地的法院迅速转向远程审理。在公共卫生指令与继续维护法治的必要性之间取得平衡,随之而来的是世界各地规模最大、无法预见的大规模远程听证会试点。对法院来说,这必然是一个行动的时刻,而不是反思的时刻。然而,在维持了法院运作之后,现在有必要反思远程法院及其用户在前所未有的情况下的体验。与之前的远程听证会不同,新冠肺炎体验完全是远程的——所有参与者都远程参加了听证会。困难在于,到目前为止,几乎没有关于这种类型的完全远程听证会的经验数据,之前的大多数研究都集中在使用视听链接(“AVL”)来促进部分远程出庭。为了弥合关于完全远程听证会的研究和数据差距,本文借鉴了以前的文献,既研究了新冠肺炎的经验,又有助于指导远程听证会的未来研究和使用。©2021,新南威尔士大学法律期刊。保留所有权利。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
7.70%
发文量
25
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