Dispensing Digital Justice: COVID-19, Courts, and the Potentially Diminishing Role of Jury Trials

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Dispensing Digital Justice: COVID-19, Courts, and the Potentially Diminishing Role of Jury Trials
Abstract
Courts around the world moved quickly in determining how to conduct proceedings remotely in response to COVID-induced shutdowns. However, both implicitly and by their actions, in the initial wake of pandemic closures Canadian courts demonstrated a consensus that jury trials could only be conducted in person, even as other proceedings moved to a digital realm. We provide a snapshot of what Canadian courts’ initial responses were in adapting to their new reality. We then highlight general issues that need to be considered in conducting court proceedings online, as well as describe issues specific to criminal jury trials. Our contention is that the failure of Canadian courts to address these issues, and their failure to make any considerations towards conducting jury trials remotely despite doing so for nearly all other proceedings, leaves the jury trial vulnerable to obsolescence in a digital world.
Publication
Interdisciplinary Justice Research
Date
2021
Volume
10
Pages
38-58
Accessed
9/1/25, 8:20 PM
ISSN
1925-2420
Short Title
Dispensing Digital Justice
Language
en
Library Catalog
ijr.uwinnipeg.ca
License
Copyright (c) 2024 Michelle I. Bertrand , David Ireland, Richard Jochelson, Kathleen Kerr-Donohue, Robson Hall
Citation
Bertrand, M. I., Ireland, D., Jochelson, R., Kerr-Donohue, K., & Hall, R. (2021). Dispensing Digital Justice: COVID-19, Courts, and the Potentially Diminishing Role of Jury Trials. Interdisciplinary Justice Research, 10, 38–58. https://ijr.uwinnipeg.ca/index.php/ijr/article/view/110