Introduction
Mavis Maclean and Bregje Dijksterhuis
PART A
DIGITAL FAMILY JUSTICE: POLITICAL AND PROFESSIONAL CONTEXTS FOR CHANGE
(1) The Political Landscape
1. ‘My Problem, My Solution’? Private Ordering and Self-help in British Columbia, Canada
Rachel Treloar
2. Choosing Paths to Dispute Resolution in Post-Communist Poland
Malgorzata Fuszara and Jacek Kurczewski
3. Competing Logics, Norms and World Visions: The Family Justice System in Turkey
Verda Irtis
(2) The Professional Landscape
4. Legal Help by Student Lawyers: Harnessing the Thinking Behind Digital Expert Systems
Lisa Webley
5. Mediation in Germany – The Possibilities for and Limits of Mediation
Adelheid Kuhne and Barbara Willenbacher
6. Different Forms of Alternative Dispute Resolution: The Framework for Family Mediation in Spain
Teresa Piconto Novales, Elena Lauroba, Cristina Merino and Marcos Loredo Colunga
PART B
THE DEVELOPMENT OF DIGITAL FAMILY JUSTICE
7. Family Justice in France: Two Dimensions of Digitisation
Benoit Bastard
8. From ADR to ODR in Scots Family Justice: No Clear Direction of Travel
Jane Mair
9. Representations of Family Justice in Online Communities
Leanne Smith
10. Digital Pathways in Australian Family Law: An Initial Snapshot
Belinda Fehlberg and Bruce Smyth
PART C
THE WAY AHEAD
11. The Online Divorce Resolution Tool ‘Rechtwijzer uit Elkaar’ Examined
Bregje Dijksterhuis
12. The Digital Contribution to Reforming the Traditional Family Justice System in England and Wales: Reaching for the Best of Both Worlds?
Mavis Maclean
13. A Short Case Study: A Considered and Collaborative Approach to Digital Delivery in England and Wales
Alexy Buck, Alejandra Diaz and Kate Gregory-Smith