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Cover of: Smart Courts in Cross-Border Litigation
Zheng Sophia TANG

Smart Courts in Cross-Border Litigation

Section: Essays
Volume 87 (2023) / Issue 1, pp. 118-143 (26)
Published 03.02.2023
DOI 10.1628/rabelsz-2023-0006
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  • Open Access
    CC BY 4.0
  • 10.1628/rabelsz-2023-0006
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Summary
Smart courts use modern technology to improve the efficiency of trials, enabling the parties to access court proceedings from a distance. This advantage is particularly important in cross-border litigation, which is characterised by the cost and inconvenience for at least one party to take part in proceedings abroad. However, although technology can significantly improve procedural efficiency, legal obstacles make efficiency impossible to achieve. This article uses service of proceedings, collecting evidence and virtual hearing as examples to show how the current law, especially the old-fashioned concept of sovereignty, hampers the functioning of technology. In the age of technology, it is necessary to reconceptualise sovereignty. This article argues that private autonomy may be utilised to reshape sovereignty in cross-border litigation procedures and reconcile the conflict between sovereignty and technology.