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Fostering innovation in the U.S. court system : identifying high-priority technology and other needs for improving court operations and outcomes / Brian A. Jackson, Duren Banks, John S. Hollywood, Dulani Woods, Amanda Royal, Patrick W. Woodson, Nicole J. Johnson.
Author
Jackson, Brian A., 1972-
[Browse]
Format
Book
Language
English
Published/Created
Santa Monica, Calif. : RAND, [2016]
©2016
Description
xxv, 138 pages : color illustrations, color map ; 28 cm
Details
Subject(s)
Courts
—
Technological innovations
—
United States
[Browse]
Justice, Administration of
—
United States
[Browse]
Author
Banks, Duren
[Browse]
Hollywood, John S., 1973-
[Browse]
Woods, Dulani
[Browse]
Royal, Amanda
[Browse]
Woodson, Patrick W.
[Browse]
Johnson, Nicole J.
[Browse]
Sponsoring body
National Institute of Justice (U.S.)
[Browse]
Issuing body
Rand Corporation
[Browse]
Summary note
"Society relies on the judicial system to play numerous roles. It is the link between law enforcement and the corrections system and serves as a check on their power over citizens. It also adjudicates civil disputes, serving as a venue for negotiation and resolution of various problems. In playing these roles, courts today are challenged by a wide range of issues, such as high caseloads, resource constraints, disparities in justice outcomes, and increasing needs to share information. For the courts to adapt to these challenges and take advantage of new opportunities to improve their ability to play their critical roles, the court system needs innovation. This report draws on published literature and new structured deliberations of a practitioner Courts Advisory Panel to frame an innovation agenda. It identifies and prioritizes potential improvements in technology, policy, and practice for the court system. Some of the top-tier needs identified by the panel and researchers include developing better tools to sort cases and match them with the process most likely to get them to an outcome efficiently and effectively, defining strategies and minimum standards for protecting the "virtual filing cabinets" that hold the court's formal records, and expanding the court-related transactions and interactions that could be done from a distance over the Internet. Such high-priority needs provide a menu of innovation options for addressing key problems or capitalizing on emerging opportunities for the court system. This report is part of a larger effort to assess and prioritize technology and related needs across the criminal justice community for the National Institute of Justice's National Law Enforcement and Corrections Technology Center system" -- Publisher's description.
Notes
"RR-1255-NIJ"--Cover page 4.
"Priority Criminal Justice Needs Initiative, a project of the RAND Corporation, the Police Executive Research Forum, RTI International, and the University of Denver."
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references (pages 127-138).
Funding information
Sponsored by the National Institute of Justice.
Action note
Committed to retain in perpetuity — ReCAP Shared Collection (HUL)
Contents
Preface
Figures and Tables
Summary
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Chapter 1. Introduction: Considering Innovation in U.S. Courts
About This Report
Chapter 2: The State of the U.S. Court System Today: Key Trends and Challenges for the U.S. Court System: Court Caseloads and Resource Scarcity
Court Security and Preparedness
Proliferation of Problem-Solving Courts
Racial and Economic Disparities in Case Processing and Outcomes
Increasing Prominence of Pro Se Litigants
Courts and Changing Technology
Moving Forward
Chapter 3. Court Technology and Practice Today
A Taxonomy of Court Technology and Practice
The State of the Art TodaySketching the Foundation for Court Innovation: Information and Communications
Doctrine, Tactics, Management, and Behavioral Knowledge Development and Training
Facility Operations and Population Services
Person-Worn Equipment and Weapons/Force
Conclusion
Chapter 4. From Courts Today to Courts Tomorrow: Identifying and Prioritizing Innovation Needs in Technology, Policy, and Practice
The Courts Advisory Panel Process : Identifying Innovation Needs
Prioritizing Innovation Needs
Toward an Innovation Agenda for the U.S. Court System: Considering the Identified Needs as a Whole
Identifying Priority Needs to Focus the Innovation Agenda
Chapter 5. Conclusions: An Innovation Agenda Focused on Information and Communications Tools and Practices
An Agenda Driven More by Adopting Existing Tools and Practices Than Developing New Ones
Fostering Innovation in the U.S. Court System
APPENDIXES
References.
Show 28 more Contents items
Other title(s)
Fostering innovation in the United States court system
Identifying high-priority technology and other needs for improving court operations and outcomes
ISBN
9780833095350 ((paperback))
0833095358 ((paperback))
OCLC
951071852
RCP
H - S
Statement on responsible collection description
Princeton University Library aims to describe library materials in a manner that is respectful to the individuals and communities who create, use, and are represented in the collections we manage.
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Fostering innovation in the U.S. court system : identifying high-priority technology and other needs for improving court operations and outcomes
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