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Current Projects Dispute Resolution

Can we crowdsource justice through tv? Primetime courts & audience juries

You The Jury - tv civil courts

News appeared today that NBC picked up a pilot from the man behind Law & Order, Dick Wolf, to create a show for next TV season, called You The Jury.

On the show, a civil court case will play out, and the TV-watching public will play the jury. Like with American Idol or other reality shows, people watching at home can use their digital devices to vote on the outcome they think best.

Producers from other reality competitions — Master Chef & Project Runway — will also be working on this show as well.

What does this mean, is it good or bad? One part of me is excited for more view into the realities of the legal process on primetime television — perhaps this is a democratizing effort to make the legal system more comprehensible and visible to normal people. And like other online proposals to crowdsource dispute resolution, through lots of people voicing ‘what’s right, what’s wrong’ — then there might be some model that could be useful in new dispute resolution design.

But my big fears are (1) that a narrative/reality-based show approach will oversimplify the case and lead to distorted outcomes, and (2) that like with Serial, when you open a real-life case open for public scrutiny through mass media, the public might end up pursuing mob justice on platforms like Reddit and otherwise.

Any thoughts, should we be hybridizing our justice system with entertainment channels? Is there any upside to this that makes it worth the potential risks?

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Ideabook Integration into Community

Every state should have a single legal help portal #abafutures

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More calls for streamlined legal help services, this time from Jim Sandman of the Legal Services Corporation.

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Ideabook Work Product Tool

Package up legal services with mobile tech #abafutures

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A thought from this morning ‘so session.

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Background

Legal Innovation Blue Sky Agenda #ABAFutures

Legal Innovation Blue Sky Agenda
My sketches from this morning’s agenda-setting working group: what are the big challenges to legal innovation? What do we as a profession (and beyond) need to focus on to build a better 21st century legal system?
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Categories
Background

Why is getting help for legal problems such a labyrinth? #abafutures

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A great, rousing talk from Bay Area Legal Aid executive director Alex Gulotta. Looking at legal help from a person’s perspectives.

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Ideabook Integration into Community

How do we get law out into immigrant communities?

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We need to think from immigrants’ points  of view — where they are now, what tech they use, who they trust.

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Ideabook Work Product Tool

To innovate lawyers must democratize their client relationships #abafutures

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Some more radical thoughts from Denis Weil, provoking lawyers to rethink how they relate to their users to find effective paths toward innovation.

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Ideabook Work Product Tool

Can we build family law tech?

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A challenge  from Justice Cuellar’s at the ABA Legal Innovation Summit.

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Background

Tino Cellar on legal innovation

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We are in a new era, shaped by technology  and globalization. How will we respond?
Judge Tino Cuellar’s challenge to the ABA.

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Background

Using choice architecture for better legal services

I’ve been reading a bunch of behavioral economics texts & taking notes on how it all might be made useful for legal services design.

Here are some of my sketched notes from while reading Nudge by Cass Sunstein & Richard Thaler, and then another article by Richard Thaler & Will Tucker in Harvard Business Review on Smarter Information, Smarter Consumers.

Wise Design - behavioral economics for legal services design

Wise Design - behavioral economics for legal services design

Wise Design - behavioral economics for legal services design

Wise Design - behavioral economics for legal services design

Wise Design - behavioral economics for legal services design

Wise Design - behavioral economics for legal services design