Virtual Courts: The Changing Face of Indian Judicial System.
11 Pages Posted: 22 Jun 2021
Date Written: June 12, 2021
Abstract
The global catastrophe has had a huge impact on India as well as on the Indian judiciary. Throughout India, all the courts have been suspended for more than two weeks, leading to a pause throughout trial proceedings. Access to justice is a constitutional right in order to ensure that there is no infringement of human rights and to optimize social isolation, the judiciary has turned to virtual justice. India's first virtual court was launched in Faridabad in 2019. Until then, relatively little attempt has been made to convert traditional courts into virtual courts. On 26 November 2019, the President of India unveiled an application called 'Supreme Court Vidhik Anuvaad Software,' which is capable of translating English judicial records into nine vernacular languages and vice versa. The Official Multilingual Mobile Application of the Supreme Court of India will also be released to provide accurate real-time access to case status, review screen, judgements to lawyers and litigants, daily orders, etc. Much technical advancement has been made in the judiciary, such as capturing testimony by video conferencing , but a significant change to virtual courts has arisen as a result of the current Covid-19pandemic. Before delving into the key findings and recommendations of the PSC, one question considered by it is of immense importance. Is a court a place or a service? If a court is indeed a service, then it is simpler for it to function online. On the other hand, if a court is a place, more than a service, then that may bring nuances and complications of its own as far as the digitisation of courtrooms is concerned.
Keywords: Virtual courts, Corona, Case Data, Online Courts, Benefits, Drawback, Challenges
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