Judges can instill greater public confidence in the courts by embracing technology to improve court services and to speed the pace of justice delivery.
This according to the United States Appeals Court Judge, the Hon. Justice Margaret McKeown speaking at a special forum organized by the Caribbean Agency for Justice Solutions and the American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN) under the theme âEvolving Judicial Practice for the Digital Ageâ.
Justice McKeown stated that âthere is a need for the justice sector to respond more quickly and more effectively because we are now functioning in a world where technology has changed the publicâs perception and expectation of speedy and more convenient service delivery.â
She acknowledged that the Internet has been a game changer for the courts, requiring the judiciary not just to understand technology, but to also be cognizant of changing attitudes and behaviours that affect citizens, corporations and nations.
âWe need to instil public confidence in the courts by addressing these issues with enthusiasm, not fear, and with an open mind, knowing that like the Internet, our decisions will have a ripple effect in years to come,â she said. âWe want to do good and we want to do well, but we also want to do justice. We need to have a mindset and a paradigm change to speed the pace of change, because if we canât give a good result in a timely manner, then it doesnât do any good at all.â
Justice McKeown shared the stage with President of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ), the Hon. Justice Adrian Saunders and the Chairman of the Caribbean Association of Judicial Officers (CAJO) and CCJ Judge, The Hon. Justice Peter Jamadar.
The Justices commended the organizers and remarked on the timeliness of the event for judicial officers from North American, Latin America and the Caribbean.
âIt is vital that the judiciary be kept abreast of technological trends and their implications for our courts, the legal profession and our wider society,â stated Justice Saunders.
The forum was the inaugural event in a series of judicial education programmes being hosted by the Caribbean Agency for Justice Solutions and ARIN, in collaboration with the CCJ and CAJO.
It is heartening to see the judiciary rallying to the cause of ameliorating the transaction of justice among Caribbean, Latin America and North American jurists.
A marriage of the regionâs technological resources, manpower and expertise ( it seems) will certainly help streamline and bring to bear the type of efficiency required for judicial agencies to update its response capabilities to stay abreast of changes in a digital world evolving by leaps and bounds.
Be-that-as-may, one always looks with a sideways glance of skepticism on such ventures. Is this going to be where the âbig sharksâ devour the small sharks?
Where beautiful rhetoric is served on golden plates in plush hotel conference rooms amid raucous formulaic applauding?
What are the immediate, preliminary and quantifiable measures taken to lay the cornerstones of this vision?
Will these committees be as grasshoppers which speak loudly in the cool morning but disappear when the heat of political gerrymandering causes every man to draw into their hard shells of nationalism and discrimination?