The Civil Procedure Rules at 20
Edited by Andrew Higgins
Table of Contents
Part I: Introduction
1. The Civil Procedure Rules Twenty Years On: The Practitioners' Perspective, Damien Byrne Hill and Maura McIntosh
2. Keep Calm and Keep Litigating, Andrew Higgins
Part II: Judicial Presentations
3. Rule-Making For a Digital Court Process: The Civil Procedure Rules, Terence Etherton
4. Discovery: To Disclosure and Beyond, Peter Coulson
5. Transformation from First Principles, Ernest Ryder
6. Interventions in Judicial Review Proceedings, Nathalie Lieven
7. National Security, Closed Material Procedures, and Fair Trials, Martin Chamberlain
8. Civil Justice Reform: Where Next?, Rupert Jackson
9. Reflections from Former Masters of the Rolls on Managing Civil Justice, Kate O'Regan
Part III: Collective Redress
10. Taking Stock of the Collective Proceedings Regime in the Competition Appeal Tribunal - A Successful Compromise?, Stephen Wisking and Ruth Allen
11. Lord Woolf, Multi-Party Situations, and Limitation Periods, Rachael Mulheron
Part IV: Disclosure
12. Disclosure: Should We Have Stayed with the RSC?, Charles Hollander
13. Proportionality and Search-based Disclosure, Stuart Sime
Part V: Judicial Review
14. The Use of Empirically Based Information when Reforming and Evaluating Judicial Review, Maurice Sunkin
15. 1. Reforming Judicial Review Costs Rules in an Age of Austerity, Joe Tomlinson & Alison Pickup
Part VI: Costs and Funding
16. The Overriding Principles of Affordable and Expeditious Adjudication, Rabeea Assy
17. The Long Struggle for Fixed Cost Reform, John Sorabji
Part VII: National Security
18. A Core Irreducible Minimum? The Operation of the AF (No. 3) Duty in the Closed Material Procedure, Hayley J. Hooper
Part VIII: Technology
19. Reform of Civil Justice, Richard Goodman
20. Artificial Intelligence in the Administration of Justice, Adrian Zuckerman