This book explores an increasingly important issue for legal systems across the world. It asks what do we lose and gain when legal proceedings go online? Adopting a multi-disciplinary socio-legal perspective, it draws on an emerging body of empirical evidence from the UK, Australia, Canada and the US about the ways in which digital justice is being conceived of and experienced. Insights are drawn from across the social sciences to discuss the interface of digitalisation with a range of issues such as due process, procedural justice, digital disadvantage, ceremony and ritual, science and technology studies and the dematerialisation of the civic sphere. Written accessibly and provocatively, it poses questions from a variety of different perspective with a particular focus on marginalised groups.
- I Can Read By Myself
- NPR's Favorite eBooks for Young Readers
- Middle School eBooks
- Children's Classics
- Popular titles
- No wait, no problems
- Build Them Up: Self-Confidence for Kids
- See all ebooks collections
- Audiobooks for Middle Schoolers
- No wait, no problems
- Popular titles
- Check these out!
- See all audiobooks collections