Government results, recruitments and notices — official sources only PYQ Vault Join Telegram

Supreme Court and DoJ Conclude National Conference on Judicial Process Re-engineering

The Supreme Court's eCommittee and the Department of Justice concluded a two-day national conference on April 12, 2026, aimed at modernizing India’s legal framework. Led by Chief Justice Surya Kant, the sessions focused on the eCourts Mission Mode Project and the transition toward a digital-first judiciary.

The National Conference provided a roadmap for the next phase of the eCourts Mission Mode Project, a pan-India initiative launched in 2005. The 2026 sessions focused on 're-engineering the present' to 'redefine the future,' examining how digital tools can mitigate case pendency and improve accessibility. Discussions centered on five working sessions covering AI implementation for legal research, the expansion of virtual courtrooms, and the standardization of e-filing across all judicial tiers. Chief Justice Surya Kant noted that technology serves as an enabler to ensure fair and timely justice.

This collaboration between the eCommittee and the Department of Justice ensures the executive provides the necessary budgetary and technical support for the judiciary's digital roadmap. A primary outcome discussed was the development of a unified judicial data grid for real-time case tracking across district courts. These changes necessitate increased digital literacy among legal practitioners as procedural rules evolve to accommodate paperless filings and remote hearings.

Glossary

eCourts Mission Mode Project: A national initiative to transform the Indian Judiciary through the ICT enablement of courts.

Judicial Process Re-engineering: The redesign of legal workflows and procedures to improve efficiency via modern technology.

Rate this Study Update

Help other aspirants by rating the quality & accuracy of this current affair article.

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (25 votes)

Pulse Forums Discussions

Start a dedicated discussion thread or link this article to an active thread for study conversation.

Related Stories