Supreme Court e-Committee Calls for
Comments, Suggestions and Inputs on the Draft Vision Document for its 3rd Phase
of eCourts Project
[Ministry of Law and Justice
Press Release/04.04.2021]
In another major initiative
the eCommittee Supreme Court has prepared the draft vision
document for Phase III of the eCourts Project under the
auspices of the Supreme court of India. E-Courts Project is a mission mode project
undertaken by the Department of Justice, Government of India.
The eCommittee Supreme
Court of India yesterday released the Draft Vision document for Phase III of the
aforementioned e-Courts Project. The Press release from ecommittee
today stated that the draft vision document is hosted on the ecommittee website https://ecommitteesci.gov.in/document/draft-vision-document-for-e-courts-project-phase-iii/
and the Chairperson of eCommittee
has requested all the stakeholders, i.e Advocates, Litigants,
common citizens, Law students, Technical experts all to come forward to give valuable
inputs suggestions and feedback as the knowledge, insight, concerns, and experience
of the stakeholders will help to refine the vision document of the next phase of
the ecourts Project and to plan its implementation.
Yesterday in this regard, the Chairperson of eCommittee Dr Justice Dhananjaya Y Chandrachud, Judge, Supreme
Court of India also addressed various stakeholders, including all chief justices
of the High courts, Legal luminaries, Law schools, IT experts,
welcoming the inputs, suggestions and comments on the Draft Vision documents. Some
of the key extracts of the letter of the Chairperson Dr
Justice Dhananjaya Y Chandrachud
is as follows:
The eCommittee of the
Supreme Court has been overseeing the implementation of the eCourts
Project, conceptualized under the "National Policy and Action Plan for Implementation
of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in the Indian Judiciary-2005".
The eCommittee has evolved in terms of its roles and responsibilities
over the last fifteen years.
A solid foundation for the objectives of the eCommittee has been substantially achieved in the first two
phases of the Project. The objectives of the eCommittee
include: Interlinking of all courts across the country;
ICT enablement of the Indian judicial system; Enabling courts to enhance judicial
productivity, both qualitatively and quantitatively; Making the justice delivery
system accessible, cost-effective, transparent and accountable; and Providing citizen-centric
services. As Phase-II will soon conclude, the Committee initiated steps for preparing
a vision document for Phase-III.
Phase III of the eCourts
Project in India is rooted in two central facets—access and inclusion. Phase III
of the eCourts Project envisions a judicial system that
is more easily accessible irrespective of geographical distances, efficient and
equitable for every individual who seeks justice, makes more efficient use of human
and other resources, and absorbs the latest technology for a positive environmental
impact.
This vision for Phase III is sought to be built
on the following four building blocks:
1.
Core Values: Phase III must
strive for a modern judicial system, governed by core values of trust, empathy,
sustainability and transparency which, while simplifying procedures, will maximise the positives of technology and minimise its risks and challenges.
2.
Whole-of-system approach:
Phase III must aim to make processes more efficient across all three components
of dispute management i.e. dispute avoidance, containment and resolution. Each of
these components will require technological integration with different institutions.
3.
Adoption frameworks: Phase
III must focus on building strong adoption frameworks. Such frameworks must include
behavioural nudges, adequate training and skill set development,
feedback loops, along with the requisite mandate of law.
4.
Governance framework: From
a governance perspective, while numerous judicial decisions have validated the use
of technology in judicial processes, Phase III must address the accompanying administrative
structures. The key goals and strategy of Phase III prioritise
the creation of a core digital infrastructure that can enable the development of
services for dispute resolution by the judiciary and services of solutions for dispute
containment and resolution by the ecosystem.
Successful operationalization of the goals of Phase
III will require careful planning around sequencing, budgeting, procurement, contract
management, adoption and change management, and a robust monitoring and evaluation
framework. This Draft Vision Document provides the blueprint for such operationalization.
The feedback, inputs, suggestions can be send to
the ecommittee email id ecommittee@aij.gov.in within 2 weeks.