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WASHINGTON STATE ACCESS TO JUSTICE TECHNOLOGY PRINCIPLES: A PERSPECTIVE FOR JUSTICE SYSTEM PROFESSIONALS, THE

Justice System Journal,  2006  by Zorza, Richard,  Horowitz, Donald J

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Dale, D. M. (2003). Technology and Access to the Justice System: Conversations in Focus Groups with Users of the Justice System in Washington State. Washington: Access to Justice Technology Bill of Rights Committee of the Washington State Access to Justice Board. www.atjtbor.org

Katsh, E. (1995). Law in a Digital World. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

___ (1989). Electronic Media and the Transformation of Law. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Small, T.W., R. Boiko, and R. Zorza (2004). "Designing an Accessible, Technology-Driven Justice System: An Exercise in Testing the Access to Justice Technology Bill of Rights," 79 Washington Law Review 223.

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"Symposium: Technology, Values, and the Justice System" (2004). 79 Washington Law Review. http://www.law.washington.edu/WLR/archives/symposium.html

Washington State Supreme Court. (2004). "In the Matter of the Access to Justice Technology Principles."

Court order: http: //www.courts.wa.gov/court_rules/?fa=court_rules.display&.group=am &set =ATJ&.ruleid=amatj0lorder

Principles: http: //www.courts.wa.gov/court_rules/?fa=court_rules.display&group=am &set=ATJ&ruleid=amatj02principles

Webster, L. P. (1996). Automating Court Systems. Williamsburg, VA: National Center for State Courts.

DONALD J HOROWITZ, a former superior court judge in the state of Washington, received his B.A. degree from Columbia University and his law degree from Yale. In addition to his private practice, he served as a Washington state senior assistant attorney general and was the first chief counsel for its Department of Social and Health Services and later its deputy secretary. He is chair of the Access to Justice Technology Bill of Rights Committee of the Washington State Access to Justice Board and is involved in a number of groups related to equal justice. E-mail: horowitz13@hotmail.com

RICHARD ZORZA, who received his J.D. from Harvard Law School, is an attorney and independent consultant who works on issues of access to justice. He is the coordinator of the Self-Represented Litigation Network hosted at the National Center for State Courts, and is a consultant to the Harvard Law School Bellow-Sacks Project on the Future of Access to Civil Justice and to the Pro Bono Net national network of access-to-justice Web sites. He was the main consultant to the Access to Justice Technology Principles Process in Washington State. He is the author of The Self-Help Friendly Court: Designed from the Ground Up to Work for People Without Lawyers (National Center for State Courts, 2002). E-mail: Richard@zorza.net

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