Post by rajiyakhatun406 on Feb 12, 2024 5:34:26 GMT
Composed of more than 400 professionals from more than 30 countries, the European Legal Techology Association (ELTA) has the mission of promoting knowledge about Legal Tech and its efficient use. With the intention of responding to this mission, they have prepared a suggestive decalogue so that parliamentarians, public officials and other people responsible for the Administration of Justice can use it as a guide and thus design future justice systems at the service of citizens and deploy the most appropriate technologies to support modern and easy access to it. ADVERTISING As we all know, Justice, like all public services, has been overwhelmed in all European countries by the pandemic. COVID-19 has caught public administrations insufficiently prepared to offer the service required by citizens.
The usual volume of litigation has increased exponentially and is expected to continue doing so in the coming months as a consequence of unforeseen circumstances such as the paralysis of Ecuador Email List economic activities, the forced social isolation that has generated more confrontations in the family environment, the questioning of some citizens of the decisions taken by public powers, etc. Thus, in light of these circumstances, in most European countries the authorities responsible for Justice are announcing their intention to reform their systems to be able to face these new challenges, pointing to digital transformation as a solution to carry it out.
For this reason, the working group led by María Jesús González-Espejo, Vice President of ELTA and by the members of its network of ambassadors Holger Zscheyge (Russia), Gregoire Miot (France), Konstantinos Anagnostopoulos (Greece), have developed 10 guidelines with a brief description and a concrete solution, with the logical nuance of the recommended use of Legal Tech , to make them effective: 1. Justice with strategy Reform Justice with long-term planning and an overall vision, not with sporadic measures, based on the progressive achievement of small objectives, and that also involves all interest groups, and not just a part of them, in the design of the plan.
The usual volume of litigation has increased exponentially and is expected to continue doing so in the coming months as a consequence of unforeseen circumstances such as the paralysis of Ecuador Email List economic activities, the forced social isolation that has generated more confrontations in the family environment, the questioning of some citizens of the decisions taken by public powers, etc. Thus, in light of these circumstances, in most European countries the authorities responsible for Justice are announcing their intention to reform their systems to be able to face these new challenges, pointing to digital transformation as a solution to carry it out.
For this reason, the working group led by María Jesús González-Espejo, Vice President of ELTA and by the members of its network of ambassadors Holger Zscheyge (Russia), Gregoire Miot (France), Konstantinos Anagnostopoulos (Greece), have developed 10 guidelines with a brief description and a concrete solution, with the logical nuance of the recommended use of Legal Tech , to make them effective: 1. Justice with strategy Reform Justice with long-term planning and an overall vision, not with sporadic measures, based on the progressive achievement of small objectives, and that also involves all interest groups, and not just a part of them, in the design of the plan.