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Pro Se
Statistics Madelynn
Herman The following list of online reports provides a snapshot of statistics in various jurisdictions around the country. State Court
Pro Se Statistics: Challenge
to Justice-A Report on Self Represented Litigants in New Hampshire
Courts—Findings and Recommendations of the New Hampshire Supreme Court Task
Force on Self Representation.
State of New Hampshire Judicial Branch (January 2004). This
recent article provides some statistics on pro se litigants in New Hampshire.
For example:
Report
of the Joint Iowa Judges Association and Iowa State Bar Association Task Force
on Pro Se Litigation. (May 18, 2005). American Judicature
Society website. This report states:
California
Statewide Action Plan for Self-represented Litigants. California
Judicial Council Task Force on Self Represented Litigants (2004).
See page 2 for statistics. For example:
Hough,
Bonnie Rose. Description
of California Courts Programs on Self Represented Litigants. A paper
prepared for a meeting with of the International legal aid group—Harvard (June
2003). This report provides quite a few statistics on self-represented litigants
in California. For example, the report states:
John
Voelker. Wisconsin
Pro Se Task Force Report. The Wisconsin Pro Se Working Group. A
Committee of the Office of Chief Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court
(December 2000). This report states:
Report
of the Boston Bar Association Task Force on Unrepresented Litigants
(August 18, 1998). For example:
Washington
State Pro Se Statistics. The Superior Court Statistical Reporting Manual. Washington Courts. The
Washington Courts track pro se cases by case type, however, this webpage does
not provide the statistical reports. Probate
and Family Court Department Pro Se Statistics 2005.
Numbers are provided but not percentages. Pro
Se Statistics Data Collection Summary Sheet. Boston Bar (December 1997).
Statistical
Overview.
Supreme Court of Louisiana—Two Year Trend in Activity.
This overview provides statistics including pro se writs filed, refused,
and granted for 2000. State
Appellate Court Pro Se Statistics: Montana
2005 Pro Se Statistics.
Montana Supreme Court. The statistics provided in this report include civil,
criminal, and inmate appeals. For example:
New Mexico
Court of Appeals Pro Se Statistics. For example:
Federal
Court Pro Se Statistics: U.S.
Bankruptcy Court Statistics.
Eastern District of California. Pro se district filings are listed:
Statistics
on Pro Se Filings in the U.S. Bankruptcy Courts for the District of
Massachusetts.
These statistics provide a comparison of pro se debtor cases to total
bankruptcy cases. Other
Statistics: Critical
Issues: Planning Priorities for the Wisconsin Court System Fiscal Years
2006-2007 and 2007-2008. Wisconsin Supreme Court (May 2006); This report states:
Ryan Craig
Munden. Access
to Justice: Pro Se Litigation in Indiana (Fall 2005). From the American
Judicature Society website:
Anne
Zimmerman. “Going
Pro Se.” Wisconsin Lawyer (December 2000). This article provides
several statistics and quotes the 1991 American Bar Association study of family
law cases in Maricopa County, Arizona:
The
Future of Self-Represented Litigation: Report from the March 2005 Summit.
Williamsburg, VA: National Center for State Courts (2005). This publication
provides a wide range of papers describing several innovative solutions to
meeting the needs of pro se litigants as well as provides various statistics.
For example: · From Paper 1: Framing the Issue by John Greacen, “We have learned the following about programs provided by the courts that serve self represented litigants: o The rates of usage vary dramatically, with only a third of self represented litigants taking advantage of the courts’ program in some jurisdictions, while 80% use the programs in other jurisdictions. o That programs tend to serve many more plaintiffs than defendants (with ratios ranging from a low of 2.5 plaintiffs for every defendant for a high of 15 plaintiffs for every defendant) in family law cases; the converse is true in landlord tenant and debt collection cases.” John
Greacen. Self
Represented Litigants and Court and Legal Services Responses to their Needs:
What We Know. California Judicial Council, Center for Families,
Children, and the Courts (2002). This article provides a host of statistics on
pro se litigation in various jurisdictions as of 2002. |