Objective
This seminar addresses various challenges linked to
digitalisation that judges, prosecutors and lawyers in private practice
working in the field of EU criminal justice will have to face in the
years ahead.
Some of these challenges such as the exchange of
electronic evidence, videoconferencing, use of open-source
intelligence, artificial intelligence, digital technology, etc. are here
to stay and will become the ’new normal’.
This event is part of a large-scale project
sponsored by the European Commission entitled “Judicial training to
prepare criminal justice professionals for #digitalisation and
#artificialintelligence”. It consists of 12 seminars to take place in
various EU cities over the period 2024-2027.
Key topics
- Technical issues (internet caches,
proxy servers, encryption, deep/dark web, etc.)
- Legal issues (evaluation of the search
results, reliability and credibility of authentication, search across
jurisdictions)
- Challenges posed by websites, social
networks, emails and other computer-generated or stored
documents
- Presenting internet searches in
court
- e-Evidence Digital Exchange System
(e-EDES)
- Videoconferencing
- Artificial Intelligence (AI)
Participants will receive a fixed contribution towards their travel
expenses and are asked to book their own travel. The condition for
payment of this contribution is to sign all attendance sheets at the
event. No supporting documents are needed. For further details please
see the project subsite.
Who should
attend?
Judges, prosecutors, court staff and lawyers in
private practice, who are citizens of eligible EU Member States
participating in the EU Justice Programme (Denmark does not
participate), Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina Kosovo* and
Ukraine.
(*This
designation is without prejudice to positions on status and is in line
with UNSCR 1244/1999 and the ICJ opinion on the Kosovo declaration of
independence).