Transforming the Law
Essays on Technology, Justice and the Legal Marketplace
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46 341 Ft
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 21 December 2000
- ISBN 9780198299226
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages316 pages
- Size 244x163x22 mm
- Weight 597 g
- Language English
- Illustrations numerous tables 0
Categories
Short description:
This is the latest book from law and technology guru Richard Susskind, author of best-selling The Future of Law, bringing together in one volume eleven significant essays on the application of IT to legal practice and the administration of justice, including Susskind's very latest thinking on key topics such as knowledge management and the impact of electronic commerce and electronic government.
MoreLong description:
Richard Susskind is one of the world's leading experts on the application of information technology in the legal field, and an independent consultant to the government, private sector law firms and industry. His previous books, Expert Systems in Law (OUP, 1987) and The Future of Law (OUP, 1996), have both served to set the agenda for the serious discussion of the subject. This new volume features major new essays that analyse where the legal marketplace and community has now got to in applying and responding to the new technological possibilities, and examines the key issues that must now be tackled (in particular knowledge management and electronic commerce). It also includes eleven of Richard Susskind's most important past essays, on the legal application of IT, each updated to make clear their continued relevance to law and justice today.
The most important and useful book I have ever read about technology's impact on lawyers ... I give Transforming the Law the highest recommendation. It is a must-read for firm partners and others responsible for making strategic decisions about law and technology, including lawyers concerned about their future in the profession.
Table of Contents:
Part I: Legal Service in the New Economy
Legal Electronic Commerce
The Client Service Chain
Part II: The Future Of Law
The Future of Law Summarized
The Future of Legal Practice
The Likely and the Possible
A Response to Critics
Part III: Expert Systems in Law
An Introduction to Expert Systems in Law
A Jurisprudential Approach to Expert Systems in Law
Expert Systems in Law: From Theory into Practice
An Early Case Study in Packaging the Law
PART IV: IT in the Justice System
IT in the English Civil Justice System
The Electronic Pillars of Justice
The Computer Judge: Early Thoughts