• What Price Civil Justice? (HOBART PAPERS)

What Price Civil Justice? (HOBART PAPERS)

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Est. Date: Dec 1, 2025

In Britain the costs of justice - to taxpayers and litigants - have been rising faster than GDP. For efficiency reasons and to encourage innovation, reform is required and some action is already underway. But reform is complicated because 'justice' is a complex product - bought on 'trust' by many consumers and with precedent and spillover effects. Some good ideas for reform are already in circulation. But there is a case for experimentation rather than trying to work out in advance which ideas should be implemented. Market forces should have a bigger role in the civil justice system and there should be more competition in the provision of dispute resolution services. Probable features of a reformed judicial system would be competitive tendering, better information for clients about alternative ways of proceeding and more power for trial judges to control the passage of a case. The supply of judges also needs to be addressed: court fees could be determined by market forces and the proceeds ploughed back into judicial capacity. Alternative dispute resolution (ADR) procedures allow parties a choice of jurisdictions. ADR produces precedents, to the extent they are required, and does not need the threat of litigation in the background. A big advantage of ADR is that it avoids monopolized law which otherwise tends to produce inflexibility, bad rules and politicization.

  • Author(s): Alan Sir Peacock, Brian G. M. Main
  • Publisher: Institute Of Economic Affairs
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Published: 2000-01-01
  • Dimensions: Height: 8.54 Inches, Length: 7.76 Inches, Weight: 0 Pounds, Width: 0.31 Inches
  • Estimated Delivery: Dec 1, 2025
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