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Arkfeld on Electronic Discovery and Evidence, 2nd Ed. |
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| Michael R. Arkfeld, Esq. |

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| Price: |
$245.00 |
| Publisher: |
Law Partner Publishing |
| Format: |
1 Looseleaf volume, 1000+ pages with CD and 2 Best Practices Guides |
| ISBN: |
9781422446218 |
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©3/2008 Arkfeld |
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Table of Contents:
Chapter 1: Electronic Information in Litigation
Sets the stage for understanding the pervasive change from paper to electronic evidence and discusses the unique characteristics of electronic data and why you have to discover and produce this evidence.
Chapter 2: Creation and Storage of Electronic Information
Provides basic information as to how electronic information is created, stored and retrieved, and includes an analysis of storage media, devices and locations.
Chapter 3: Structure and Types of Electronic Information
Discusses the underlying computer setup, business software applications and how electronic material is organized; explores special issues unique to electronic information and provides a detailed analysis of the different software types (e-mail, web pages, etc.), as well as citations to legal authorities when applicable.
Chapter 4: Computer Forensics, Experts and Service Bureaus
Explores the role of forensic specialists in assisting with the collection and processing of electronic information.
Chapter 5: Collecting, Processing and Searching Electronic Information
Focuses on the actual collection, processing and searching of electronic information as well as the different data formats.
Chapter 6: Discovery and Production Process
Discusses the discovery and production steps and focuses on the overall plan, scope of request, preservation request, production format and other practical issues involved in discovering and producing data.
Chapter 7: Court Procedural Rules and Case Law
Focuses on the new e-discovery Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and case law relevant to the production and disclosure of electronic information; covers a broad area including Rule 16 pretrial conference, Rule 26 initial disclosures, experts reports, relevancy, overbroad claims, cost allocation issues, work product, attorney-client waiver issues and protective orders, etc.
Chapter 8: Admissibility of Electronic Evidence
Examines the evidentiary considerations for the admission of electronic evidence; discusses the general concepts of preliminary questions, judicial notice, relevancy, expert witness testimony, hearsay, authentication, and the Best Evidence rule as they pertain to specific electronic data.
Complete with a comprehensive subject index, a glossary of terms, and a detailed table of cases, this treatise is your authoritative resource to electronic discovery and evidence. |
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Michael R. Arkfeld, Esq. |
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