Consultation outcome

Open Justice: the way forward

Applies to England and Wales

This consultation has concluded

Read the full outcome

Summary of responses

Summary of responses (Welsh version)

Detail of outcome

In May 2023, the Ministry of Justice ran a Call for Evidence on Open Justice.  

The respondents highlighted the importance of open justice and how justice must be seen to be done. Accessibility of the law and public understanding of the justice system was seen by many as important principles which underpin the rule of law. They also contributed to topics such as accessing courts and tribunals; remote observation; broadcasting; single justice procedure; access to court documents and information, and data access and reuse.

This report summarises the responses to the call for evidence. The insights shared by respondents will inform the Department’s policies to modernise and improve the transparency of the justice system, ensuring it upholds the rule of law.


Original consultation

Summary

This Call for Evidence is seeking evidence on a range of topics covering open justice, access to data, and the transparency of our court and tribunal services.

This consultation ran from
to

Consultation description

We want to hear from all interested parties, including the judiciary, legal professionals, the media, businesses, academics, law and technology experts and our court and tribunal users on how you think the government can uphold and strengthen open justice in the modern age.

We invite respondents to email their responses to the questions in the call for evidence to Openjusticepolicy@justice.gov.uk. Your evidence will be used to help inform decisions regarding the development of policy and services in this area. We would be grateful for your response by 7 September 2023.

Documents

Updates to this page

Published 11 May 2023
Last updated 5 February 2025 + show all updates
  1. Welsh translation of summary of responses published.

  2. Summary of responses published.

  3. Welsh version published.

  4. First published.

Sign up for emails or print this page