Do Litigants Understand Remote Hearings? What should be done about it?By Heather Douglas|2020-10-28T15:24:54-04:00October 29, 2020|Access to Justice, Legal Theory, The Future of Law|Read More
What is Litigation Really Like?By Heather Douglas|2020-10-22T14:31:08-04:00October 23, 2020|Law in Motion, law school|Read More
Creating Online Parks and What Courts Can Learn from ThemBy Heather Douglas|2020-10-21T15:25:06-04:00October 22, 2020|Access to Justice|Read More
Do Peremptory Challenges Help Make a Jury More Impartial?By Heather Douglas|2020-10-08T10:31:36-04:00October 8, 2020|Current Events|Read More
Electronic Court Filing in Ontario is Becoming More CommonBy Heather Douglas|2020-10-01T15:09:02-04:00October 1, 2020|Access to Justice, Rules of Civil Procedure|Read More
Should We Clean Up Bad Speech With Artificial Intelligence Before It Happens?By Heather Douglas|2020-09-23T16:43:42-04:00September 24, 2020|Current Events|Read More
New Culture Shift Towards Scheduling Court Motions in OntarioBy Heather Douglas|2020-09-09T10:47:16-04:00September 10, 2020|Access to Justice, Culture, Current Events|Read More
Online Juries?By Heather Douglas|2020-08-26T13:59:04-04:00August 27, 2020|Access to Justice, Innovation|Read More
Details on CaseLines – New Ontario Electronic Court SystemBy Heather Douglas|2020-08-18T12:18:13-04:00August 20, 2020|Current Events, Law in Motion|Read More
Advice for New Lawyers in a Changing Legal MarketBy Heather Douglas|2020-07-22T11:18:39-04:00July 24, 2020|Helpful Tips|Read More
The Vanishing Trial: The Era of Courtroom Performers and the Perils of its PassingBy Heather Douglas|2020-07-15T11:27:07-04:00July 17, 2020|Law in the Media, The Future of Law|Read More
Should We Defund the Civil Rules Committee in Ontario?By Heather Douglas|2020-07-06T12:54:29-04:00July 9, 2020|Innovation|Read More