Today we're talking with our friend Nicole Bradick about using design thinking to build
tech solutions to legal problems, and about why none of that can probably fix some of the problems built into the legal system today.
Not exact matches
Maybe this low percentage is the root cause of the
legal tech industry's obsession with solving all the wrong
problems, or maybe 9 % is a typical percentage of ex-professionals
to have on staff for companies trying
to provide
tech solutions to that industry.
When the word innovation is used in relation
to law, it usually conjures up images of high -
tech solutions to old - fashioned
legal problems.
The law foundation has donated $ 50,000
to Ryerson University's
Legal Innovation Zone and $ 54,083
to Osgoode Hall Law School's Winkler Institute for Dispute Resolution
to fund initiatives that support «innovative youth - led
tech solutions to justice
problems,» according
to a statement from the law foundation.
Lots of
legal tech is happening in small and large law firms all over the world, too, as law firms come up with technological
solutions to their own
problems.
Tech that is well funded — $ 3.5 bn in the US in
legal technology tells a tale — and open - source software are making the cost of
solutions to problems and challenges accessible
to innovators.
Women and minorities in
legal tech create
solutions for a wide variety of
problems related
to the business and practice of law and the
legal system — not just access
to justice and social justice issues.