Thursday, April 2, 2015

A Case For Legal Innovations

"Mixing one's wines may be a mistake, but old and new wisdom mix admirably." ~ Bertolt Brecht

I recently heard a very interesting anecdote. Imagine a person from the 19th century descending on the world on this very day. Imagine how she will feel about the state of our society! She might be shell shocked at the number of changes the society has gone through since the 1900s and how technology has created a humongous revolution in human lives! After a long day of going from one cultural shock to another, she will then enter a courtroom. Oh what a relief - finally, somewhere in the world, the things will be exactly as she saw them in the era of the 1900s!

This may sound funny but unfortunately, this is the sad reality of the world today. The last few decades have brought momentous transformations in the human civilization: the way we communicate, the way we live and how we conduct our business - in fact, even our thinking patterns - everything has undergone massive shifts. However, very little has changed in the way we conduct our legal affairs. The legal language still has the Latin phrases which most people hardly understand, the legal community still observes age-old customs and formalities (for example, to get the license to practice in England, one of the requirements is to eat a certain number of formal dinners) and in some parts of the world, the judges still wear the wigs!!

In India, for instance, the courts observe long summer vacations as per the norms of the British colonial rule, the lawyers wear the gowns, the purpose of which appeals little to the rationality and even some of our laws are still the ones that applied to the society of the 1800s!

"There is a strong requirement for simplifying laws that affect us and how we make use of them."The laws are supposed to be for the people and their essential purpose is to set norms and bring order to make our lives better. The laws have to constantly evolve and adjust to the changing structure of the society and its people. Sadly, we have created a situation where no one other than that judges and a handful of lawyers are able to understand and derive any meaning from these laws. The legal language is far removed from the language, we use in our daily lives. And ironically, in the age where people prefer to communicate in 140 characters or less, our laws are so verbose that they can be accommodated only in extremely thick books which have intimidated law students for generations. People throughout geographies increasingly have access to technology - to the internet and mobile phones - but ironically they do not have easy access to justice.

We live in a fast-changing world that is largely online and getting online - a world where everything starting from our banking to our travel itinerary to our shopping happens online. 
"People throughout geographies increasingly have access to technology - to internet and mobile phones - but ironically they do not have easy access to justice. "
  
The legal systems today are ripe for disruption - for fundamental alterations in the way we understand laws and their impact on our lives. New innovations in the legal arena are taking place only in a handful of countries but there is a need for innovations in the legal processes across geographies.


This will have to be done with care. While we need to preserve the centuries-old legal heritage and the nuances acquired over ages, the system, and our laws will still have to be made relevant and effective for our lives today. This will have to be done in such a way that when our a friend from the 19th century might find the legal systems fascinatingly different next time she decides to visit us; even in the 2100s, our next generation would be able to sense the creatively cultivated sense of legal legacy - just like the inherent essence of human nature.

मनुर्भरत

 मनुर्भरत हमारे पाश्चात्य गुरुओं ने हमें बचपन में पढ़ाया था कि आर्य लोग खानाबदोश गड़रियों की भाँति भद्दे छकड़ों में अपने जंगली परिवारों और प...