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In 1996, the Access to Justice Report was released in which Lord Woolf declared a year earlier, that the minimum eight principal aims werent being achieved. ...
Lord Woolf identified problems with the Civil Justice System in the Woolf Report in 1999 with an intention to fix the problems. ...
The aim was for the Woolf Reform to reduce cost, make the process simpler and increase the speed of the English Civil Justice. In an attempt to speed up the Civil Justice process, the Reform encouraged both parties towards settlement and in cases were this wasn’t possible, ensure swift progress from issuing the claim to the actual hearing. The main way which the Woolf Reform encourage this is to enforce the parties on exchange of information prior to the formal court procedures meaning parties were less adversarial and more co-operative. ...
The Reform also encouraged the use of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) and simpler forms to fill in and less complex language.
Approximate Word count = 790 Approximate Pages = 3.2 (250 words per page double spaced)
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