Workshop for the Expert Research Group: “Best practices for remote participation in criminal proceedings”
Coordinators: Carolyn McKay (University of Sydney, Australia), Dorris de Vocht (Tilburg University, Netherlands), Lisa Flower (Lund University, Sweden), Christina Peristeridou (Maastricht University, Netherlands), Karolina Kremens (Uniwersytet Wrocławski, Poland)
Description of the meeting
Participating in criminal proceedings via video link has become routine in courts across the globe, enabling judges, prosecutors, lawyers, defendants, and witnesses to appear in proceedings remote from the courtroom. Yet, video links often prove insufficient for replacing physical presence in a courtroom and risk jeopardising human rights, procedural fairness and the legitimacy of courts. It is therefore paramount that we understand the social utility, benefits and potential hazards, and critically engage with the digitalisation of the criminal courtroom as an essential civic institution. The significance of the problem is seen in the widespread implementation of video links during the COVID-19 pandemic, for instance in Norway, Kenya, Ireland, England, Switzerland, the US, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia. In the Basque Country, courtroom video links are a prioritised area of development.
The overall rationale is to workshop an interdisciplinary approach to establishing best practice guidelines for remote participation and remote advocacy while ensuring procedural fairness, legitimacy and accountability of legal systems. The workshop will gather leading researchers and recognised experts from a range of disciplines particularly, sociological and socio-legal, in order to identify current gaps in knowledge and to create a research agenda for identifying best practice in virtual criminal procedures. It will provide a forum for critical and innovative thinking, interdisciplinary knowledge pooling, and collaboration.
The Virtual Criminal Justice Workshop will be structured around the impact of virtual presence on courtroom communication, interaction, participation, evidence, rituals, advocacy, and due process. It will be forward-thinking in examining emerging technologies.
The workshop will build on the successful initial hybrid Virtual Criminal Trials symposium at Maastricht University, Netherlands, 2023, and the 2024 Virtual Criminal Justice Network Conference at Lund University, Sweden. The convenors of this workshop have also founded the Virtual Criminal Justice Network (VCJN), a multidisciplinary and international network of scholars interested in video links in court. This workshop will enable the VCJN to continue its vital work in exploring video links and more firmly establishing its network collaborations.
Workshop Coordination Team
Avenida de la Universidad, 8
Apartado 28
20560 Oñati (Gipuzkoa) - Spain
T: +34 943 78... Ver teléfono
E: workshop@iisj.es