Court
News Ohio
Fourth
Report Released on New Media’s Impact on the Judiciary
By
Chris Davey
August
7, 2013
More
than half of the states have policies for using Facebook and
Twitter in the courtroom.
An
increasing number of courts are implementing rules to control
the use of new media like Facebook and Twitter in the courtroom,
according to a
survey released today by the Conference of Court Public Information
Officers.
The
2013 CCPIO New Media Survey contains the results of a national
survey of judges and court personnel conducted in June. It provides the
judicial community in the United States its first year-to-year
comparison
spanning four years of data unraveling how social media and broader
changes in
the media industry are impacting state and local judges and courts.
In
addition to the survey results, the report details recent
developments in the past year including court cases, advisory opinions
and
programmatic activities by courts using social media. It is available
for download
at www.ccpio.org.
Since
the publication of the last survey, courts have continued to
experiment with social media and other new media tools to connect with
the
public and fulfill their obligation to be open, transparent and
understandable
institutions. At the same time, lawyers, judges and courts have
continued to
experience challenges in balancing new media use with protecting the
integrity
of proceedings, judicial ethics and other concerns. The 2013
surveypaints a
picture of a judicial system that is optimistic about the potential new
media
brings while cautiously guarding against the risks.
The
survey results reveal several major conclusions.
Courts
are increasingly attempting to control communication from
the courtroom by developing formal social media policies.
Most
survey respondents agree that mobile devices should be
prohibited from courtrooms, and a large percentage believe the general
public
and litigants should not be permitted to silently communicate in any
way from
the courtroom.
The
support for allowing the traditional news media to make video
recordings and take photos in the courtroom continues to grow.
The
survey was conducted by the CCPIO, an organization of more
than 120 communications professionals working in state and federal
courts in
the United States and worldwide. Partners in the project include the
National
Center for State Courts in Williamsburg, Va., the nation’s leading
center for
research assistance to the country’s state court systems, and the E.W.
Scripps
School of Journalism at Ohio University.
More
than 15,000 individuals in the court community were invited
to participate in the electronically distributed survey. Of the total
individuals who completed the survey, 31.5 percent responded they were
judicial
officers. Results of the 2012 survey showed 45.6 percent of respondents
to be
judges; 33.4 percent were judges in the 2011 survey; and 31.4 percent
were
judges in the 2010 survey.
“Judges
and the courts increasingly recognize the impact new media
is having on the judicial process inside and out of the courtroom. The
research
highlights the need for education, introspection and dialogue to ensure
these
technologies and their uses are understood,” said Thomas Hodson, of the
Scripps
school. “Judiciaries daily are driven to reach diverse audiences to
meet the
needs of the public and promote transparency. New media technologies
are
increasingly becoming a tool to accomplish this.”
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