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Confidentiality in Litigation: Undertakings, Privilege and Open Justice


ISBN13: 9780409354447
Published: July 2024
Publisher: LexisNexis Australia
Country of Publication: Australia
Format: Paperback
Price: £145.00



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The latest work by esteemed author G E Dal Pont examines confidentiality in the core aspects of the litigation process – a topical subject matter given, among other events, the media’s disregard of the Victorian County Court’s suppression and non-publication orders in the widely publicised Pell case as well as legislative developments seeking to promote the principle of open justice. The book covers, in a dedicated and comprehensive fashion, confidentiality in discovery, confidentiality by way of privilege, and the confidentiality inherent in closed court, suppression and non-publication orders.

Features:

  • The law’s intervention via an undertaking as to confidentiality given to the court operates to counterbalance the invasion into the confidentiality (and privacy) of litigants in complying with compulsory process, such as discovery. This is the focus of Part I.
  • The law acknowledges occasions where a litigant can legally refuse to reveal certain confidential information the subject of that process, namely in relation to ‘privileged’ information or documents. This aspect forms the substance of Part II.
  • Openness, in the sense discussed in Part III, is the converse of confidentiality. An ability to attend court proceedings, disseminate the subject matter at large, and reveal the identities of participants, hardly aligns with the maintenance of confidentiality. As a result, having explained the nature of, and rationales for, open justice, the substantive chapters in Part III target how confidentiality can inform court-ordered incursions into open justice.

Subjects:
Other Jurisdictions , Australia
Contents:
PROLOGUE
PART I: CONFIDENTIALITY VIA UNDERTAKING
1. Implied Undertakings — Object, Nature and Scope
2. Implied Undertakings — Duration
3. Implied Undertakings — Modification or Release
4. Express Undertakings
5. Consequences of Breach of Undertakings
PART II: CONFIDENTIALITY VIA PRIVILEGE
6. Legal Professional Privilege
7. Medical Privilege
8. Clerical Privilege
9. Journalistic Privilege
10. Other Confidentiality-Informed Privileges
PART III: CONFIDENTIALITY AND ‘OPEN JUSTICE’
11. Incursions into Open Justice
12. Closed Court Orders
13. Suppression and Non-publication Orders at Common Law
14. Suppression and Non-publication Orders under Statute
15. Suppression and Non-publication Order Scenarios
16. Open Justice and Tribunals
17. Open Justice and Arbitration