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4 NZLSJ v (2023)

handle is hein.journals/nwzllws4 and id is 1 raw text is: Foreword
THE HONOURABLE JUSTICE SUSAN GLAZEBROOK
JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW ZEALAND
It gives me great pleasure to write this foreword to the 2023 edition of the New
Zealand Law Students'Journal. It is some years since the publication of the last
volume of this journal and the New Zealand legal landscape has been the poorer
for its absence. It is very important that young legal scholars have outlets for
writing about the topics that interest them. And it is equally important that
lawyers, judges, academics and policy-makers are exposed to new and original
thinking.
The articles in this issue certainly fulfil the aims of those involved in the
journal's revival.
The articles are diverse and original but some themes do emerge. The first
relates to access to justice, fair trials and fair outcomes in criminal cases. This is
certainly a priority for the courts and the suggestions made in the three articles
offer interesting analyses which are relevant to this theme.
Kelly Young in Communication Assistance and Participatory Rights of
Neurodiverse Children in the Youth Justice System argues for the greater
provision of specialist communication assistance to child and youth offenders
with neurodisabilities in order to fulfil New Zealand's obligations under Article
12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. She also argues
that, in order to create an environment that allows full participation of the child
or young person, lawyers, judges and youth justice facilitators should also be
trained in effective communication strategies.
Sarah Shanahan in Piercing Through the Veil of Jury Deliberations: An
Analysis of the Jury Secrecy Rule and Proposals for Reform argues that courts
should have a greater ability on appeal to investigate genuine and serious
instances of juror misconduct in the course of deliberations in order to safeguard
fair trial rights.
Vincent Kenworthy's article on Predicting Sentencing Decisions of the
New Zealand Courts Using Support Vector Machines is a timely contribution to
the current debate about the possible role of artificial intelligence in the justice
sector. In his article he uses a dataset of New Zealand rape sentences to test his
hypothesis that textual analysis by artificial intelligence of the facts of previous
sentencing decisions can be used to predict outcomes of future sentencing

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