1 hr 6 min

Open Law: how technology impacts the rule of law with Michael Green SC Reimagining Justice

    • Business

In episode no. 65 I speak with Michael Green SC, Barrister and founder of Barnet.
The discussion covers:
Open Law and how technology can make information more accessible; Who are custodians of legal information and how to best maintain it for future generations; The importance of libraries, their centrality to the law and the function of a library in an online world; The changes to the practise of law over the past few decades due to digitisation; Issues of copyright in digitising Commonwealth Law Reports in the “One to a hundred project” A failed experiment in the law: How BarNet’s purpose and activities have changed since 1997 including splitting the networking and the legal publishing functions; How legal researchers select online research platform; Why JADE considers cases at the “paragraph level” and how it actually works in terms of citations, note-ups and the technology and research that supports it; Current research into the differences in information retention from paper and electronic means; The function” of paper in reflection and contemplation, and limitations of online research; The question of ownership and resourcing of online materials; The role of predictive analytics and imagination in moving our society forward; The difficulty in reconciling different lenses through which we should regulate AI; The need to think carefully about the role of justice, courts and litigants; How Michael has maintained a busy practice at the bar and an online research company; and Michael’s definition of legal innovation. Proudly sponsored by Neota Logic
Links:
Open Law  Jade Welcome to ICLR Neota Logic's App Gallery Neota Logic Churchill Trust project Andrea Perry-Petersen – LinkedIn - Twitter @winkiepp – andreaperrypetersen.com.au
Twitter - @ReimaginingJ
Facebook – Reimagining Justice group

In episode no. 65 I speak with Michael Green SC, Barrister and founder of Barnet.
The discussion covers:
Open Law and how technology can make information more accessible; Who are custodians of legal information and how to best maintain it for future generations; The importance of libraries, their centrality to the law and the function of a library in an online world; The changes to the practise of law over the past few decades due to digitisation; Issues of copyright in digitising Commonwealth Law Reports in the “One to a hundred project” A failed experiment in the law: How BarNet’s purpose and activities have changed since 1997 including splitting the networking and the legal publishing functions; How legal researchers select online research platform; Why JADE considers cases at the “paragraph level” and how it actually works in terms of citations, note-ups and the technology and research that supports it; Current research into the differences in information retention from paper and electronic means; The function” of paper in reflection and contemplation, and limitations of online research; The question of ownership and resourcing of online materials; The role of predictive analytics and imagination in moving our society forward; The difficulty in reconciling different lenses through which we should regulate AI; The need to think carefully about the role of justice, courts and litigants; How Michael has maintained a busy practice at the bar and an online research company; and Michael’s definition of legal innovation. Proudly sponsored by Neota Logic
Links:
Open Law  Jade Welcome to ICLR Neota Logic's App Gallery Neota Logic Churchill Trust project Andrea Perry-Petersen – LinkedIn - Twitter @winkiepp – andreaperrypetersen.com.au
Twitter - @ReimaginingJ
Facebook – Reimagining Justice group

1 hr 6 min

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