13th Annual Conference 1998 IT and the Courts of England and Wales – the Next Ten Years Judging Technology Two Approaches to Analyzing Cases – Neural Networks And Linear Regression Opportunities of Computer-Mediated Legal Argument in Education Implicit Assumptions in Legal Knowledge Systems Learning from Learning – The Dialogue of Virtual and Real Courts The Delict Game Web Based Training – Its Strengths and Weakness in the Teaching of Law Information Technology in The Legal Curriculum – Reaction and Realities Supporting Effective Learning of Legal Case Solving Using a Computer Program as the Instructional Environment An Australasian Experience of the Use of Technology in Legal Education and Research – Some Lessons for Britain and Ireland Computer Simulation in Legal Education A Legal Academic’s Changing Office Copyright in Cyberspace The Implications of IT on Corporate Governance Commercial Communications as a Solution to Jurisdictional Problems in the European Information Society The Internet, Intellectual Property and International Litigation Cryptography and the Law Can Europe Regulate the Internet and Electronic Commerce Usage of Video Recordings in Surveillance, the Value of Such as Evidence and Potential Problems Which Can Arise The Death of Online Privacy The CHRIS Database Project – A Country-specific Human Rights Information System A Single Market for Everything – Except Justice Policing the New Europe – The Information Deficit Genetic Information and the Challenge to Privacy Decision Support within the Criminal Justice System Getting Support from Litigation Support From the Template to the Electronic Warehouse – Current IT Issues in Canadian Courts Understanding the Use of IT in Discretionary Decision Processes Information Technology and the Shaping of Legal Practice in the UK Legal Information Management – Making Information Available to Lawyers The Internet, Legal Regulation and Legal Pluralism Adjudicative Technologies – Privatisation as Jurisdiction Cyberspace – A World Apart The Digital Re-Mastering of Jurisdiction or Opportunity for A New Paradigm for Law