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Best
Practices Institute
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INFORMATION
SOURCES TOPICS
LINKS
CONTACT
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About
the Institute
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The
Best Practices Institute identifies and promotes practices that
enhance the effective administration of justice. The Institute was
created at the direction of the Boards of the Conference of Chief
Justices, the Conference of State Court Administrators, and the
National Center for State Courts following the 1999 National
Conference on Public Trust and Confidence in the Justice System.
During the Conference, participants repeatedly voiced the need
for a national effort to identify and champion best practices from
across the country as part of a broad strategy to improve court
performance and better serve the public.
The
Institute was inaugurated in the fall of 2000.
Its work is guided by an Advisory Board of chief justices,
state court administrators, a court manager, a presiding judge, and a
legal scholar. The intent
of the Institute is to provide a central resource to which the 50
state court systems and 16,000 state trial courts can turn to obtain
the field’s best thinking across the spectrum of judicial
administration.
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Current
Advisory Board Members
Honorable
Steve Leben
Johnson County District Court, Division 8, Kansas
Pamela Q. Harris
Court Administrator, Montgomery County Circuit Court
Maryland
Michael
J. Saks, Ph.D.
Professor, College of Law, Arizona State University
Howard
P. Schwartz
Judicial Administrator
Kansas
The
Presidents of the Conference of Chief Justices and the Conference of
State Court Administrators serve ex officio
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What
Are Best Practices
Best
practices emerge from a process that involves innovation,
documentation, evaluation, modification, and reevaluation. The process
of identifying best practices is ongoing, and “best” likely will
change or be modified as additional information is learned. “Best”
depends on the extent of the field’s knowledge and experience in a
particular substantive area at any given time. The Institute assumes
that there may be several best practices to reach a desired end and
does not adhere to a “one-size-fits-all” approach.
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BPI
Information Sources
The
Institute provides information on best practices from four sources:
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Literature searches. Staff
searches several on-line databases using key words such as best
practices, promising practices, and model programs to identify best
practices references by subject areas. Documents that are available
electronically or through the NCSC’s library are reviewed, and only
those that discuss specific practices are included in the resulting
reference list.
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NCSC summaries. Staff prepares
“practice summaries” in areas of judicial administration that have
been the subject of research and evaluation. These syntheses of
existing information offer a quick overview of the history and
implementation of a practice, evaluation information currently
available, and key contacts and references for obtaining additional
information.
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Expert opinion. In some areas
of judicial administration, staff relies on the combined knowledge and
experiences of experts to help identify best practices. Generally,
these are areas in which there is a growing consensus among
practitioners on the best ways to proceed, but conclusive empirical
information on the effectiveness of practices is not yet available.
The practices are identified through an interactive approach in which an
expert panel discusses common themes and reviews drafts of practices
based on the panel’s discussion.
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Individual
jurisdictions.
In emerging areas of judicial administration and more
established areas that have been subject to little or no systematic
research, the Institute solicits information from courts across the
country about practices they have found effective. These
field-solicited practices offer a “snap shot” of practices
jurisdictions are using to address a specific area and a starting
point for other jurisdictions developing or enhancing their own
practices in the area. Unless otherwise noted, the Institute does not
endorse these practices but provides them as examples of practices
other jurisdictions have found effective and useful.
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National Center for
State Courts
300 Newport Avenue
Williamsburg, VA 23185
Phone (800)616-6109 Fax (757)564-2022
Questions or Comments - email
webmaster@ncsc.dni.us
Copyright © 2002 The National Center for State Courts. All Rights
Reserved.
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