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Zusatztext Andrew Higgins' superbly edited Civil Procedure Rules at 20 will be of considerable interest to any practitioner. I have found it both thought-provoking and a book that made me reflect upon my own bad practice – no bad thing at all. I therefore wholeheartedly commend Civil Procedure Rules at 20. Informationen zum Autor Andrew Higgins is an Associate Professor of Civil Procedure at the Faculty of Law and Mansfield College, University of Oxford. He has published on a wide range of English procedure related topics including class actions, judicial bias, disclosure, case management, and costs and funding and has also published Legal Professional Privilege for Corporations: A Guide to 4 Major Common Law Jurisdictions (Oxford University Press 2014). Klappentext Civil Procedure Rules at 20 considers the successes and failures of the CPR, and current challenges faced by those designing, administering, and using the civil justice system. Zusammenfassung Civil Procedure Rules at 20 considers the successes and failures of the CPR, and current challenges faced by those designing, administering, and using the civil justice system. Inhaltsverzeichnis Part I: Introduction 1: Damien Byrne Hill and Maura McIntosh: The Civil Procedure Rules Twenty Years On: The Practitioners' Perspective 2: Andrew Higgins: Keep Calm and Keep Litigating Part II: Judicial Presentations 3: Terence Etherton: Rule-Making For a Digital Court Process: The Civil Procedure Rules 4: Peter Coulson: Discovery: To Disclosure and Beyond 5: Ernest Ryder: Transformation from First Principles 6: Nathalie Lieven: Interventions in Judicial Review Proceedings 7: Martin Chamberlain: National Security, Closed Material Procedures, and Fair Trials 8: Rupert Jackson: Civil Justice Reform: Where Next? 9: Kate O'Regan: Reflections from Former Masters of the Rolls on Managing Civil Justice Part III: Collective Redress 10: Stephen Wisking and Ruth Allen: Taking Stock of the Collective Proceedings Regime in the Competition Appeal Tribunal - A Successful Compromise? 11: Rachael Mulheron: Lord Woolf, Multi-Party Situations, and Limitation Periods Part IV: Disclosure 12: Charles Hollander: Disclosure: Should We Have Stayed with the RSC? 13: Stuart Sime: Proportionality and Search-based Disclosure Part V: Judicial Review 14: Maurice Sunkin: The Use of Empirically Based Information when Reforming and Evaluating Judicial Review 15: Joe Tomlinson and Alison Pickup: 1. Reforming Judicial Review Costs Rules in an Age of Austerity Part VI: Costs and Funding 16: Rabeea Assy: The Overriding Principles of Affordable and Expeditious Adjudication 17: John Sorabji: The Long Struggle for Fixed Cost Reform Part VII: National Security 18: Hayley J. Hooper: A Core Irreducible Minimum? The Operation of the AF (No. 3) Duty in the Closed Material Procedure Part VIII: Technology 19: Richard Goodman: Reform of Civil Justice 20: Adrian Zuckerman: Artificial Intelligence in the Administration of Justice ...