Digital criminal courts: The place or space of (post-)pandemic justice
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Open Access
Type
ArticleAbstract
The COVID-19 pandemic forced criminal courts to suspend jury trials, adjourn hearings and 'pivot' to remote procedures. Integral to this sudden change has been an array of digital communication technologies: audio and audio-visual links as well as third-party proprietary platforms. ...
See moreThe COVID-19 pandemic forced criminal courts to suspend jury trials, adjourn hearings and 'pivot' to remote procedures. Integral to this sudden change has been an array of digital communication technologies: audio and audio-visual links as well as third-party proprietary platforms. COVID-19 outbreaks continue to impact criminal courts with intermittent lockdowns necessitating the ongoing use of digital technologies to keep the wheels of justice turning. The era of digital criminal justice has, undoubtedly, begun. The situation has prompted judicial commentary on the 'place' or 'space' of the remote, dispersed or virtual courtroom. For legislative purposes, does a 'courtroom' include a network of diverse remote access technologies? This chapter adopts Castell’s (2010) network approach to draw a distinction between 'place' and 'space' and question whether virtual courtrooms are perhaps a 'space', not a 'place'.
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See moreThe COVID-19 pandemic forced criminal courts to suspend jury trials, adjourn hearings and 'pivot' to remote procedures. Integral to this sudden change has been an array of digital communication technologies: audio and audio-visual links as well as third-party proprietary platforms. COVID-19 outbreaks continue to impact criminal courts with intermittent lockdowns necessitating the ongoing use of digital technologies to keep the wheels of justice turning. The era of digital criminal justice has, undoubtedly, begun. The situation has prompted judicial commentary on the 'place' or 'space' of the remote, dispersed or virtual courtroom. For legislative purposes, does a 'courtroom' include a network of diverse remote access technologies? This chapter adopts Castell’s (2010) network approach to draw a distinction between 'place' and 'space' and question whether virtual courtrooms are perhaps a 'space', not a 'place'.
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Date
2023Source title
Cybercrime in the Pandemic Digital Age and BeyondPublisher
Palgrave MacmillanFunding information
ARC DE210100586Licence
Copyright All Rights ReservedRights statement
This is an Accepted Manuscript of a book chapter published by Palgrave Macmillan in Cybercrime in the Pandemic Digital Age and Beyond in 2023, available online: https://link.springer.com/978-3-031-29107-4Faculty/School
The University of Sydney Law SchoolShare