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ESI meaning

What does ESI mean?
ESI (electronically stored information) is any digital information that may need to be preserved, searched, reviewed and produced in disclosure/discovery, investigations or regulatory enquiries. It includes emails, documents, spreadsheets, databases, instant messages, texts, social media content, audio/video, system and transaction logs, website data, backups, cloud-stored data and material on mobile devices, together with associated metadata and embedded/derived data. The term is descriptive rather than a formal legal definition. UK and Irish court rules more commonly refer to “electronic documents”. Usage is broadly consistent across England & Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Ireland: - England & Wales: CPR PD 57AD (Business and Property Courts) and PD 31B address disclosure of electronic documents. - Scotland: recovery of documents (including electronic records) is managed through commission and diligence. - Northern Ireland: discovery under the Rules of the Court of Judicature encompasses electronic documents. - Ireland: the Rules of the Superior Courts and High Court practice directions recognise discovery of electronic documents. Key features and practical points include early preservation (litigation holds), identification of custodians and sources, proportionality, agreed search methodologies, review for privilege and confidentiality, and production format (native, text-searchable images, load files). Data protection (UK GDPR/EU GDPR), confidentiality, and cross‑border transfer issues are central...
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View the related News about ESI

NEWS
AI in eDisclosure: from TAR 2.0 to LLMs, practical adoption, costs and PD 57AD compliance in England and Wales

Entering the prompt into CoPilot returned compelling ideas I hadn’t envisaged when shaping this article’s structure. It’s another clear use case for idea generation within artificial intelligence. AI can rapidly distil extensive information, viewpoints and inventive approaches that people might not instinctively explore. By surfacing unlikely connections and a diversity of perspectives, it fuels innovation and pushes thinking beyond familiar patterns. eDisclosure history eDisclosure has experienced a significant shift, driven chiefly by AI’s rise and by the swelling volume and complexity of data. A linear style of review was once routine in the legal sector, trawling through immense collections rife with redundant and non-responsive material. Clients reviewed hard copy documents, concealing privilege with a black marker. The growth of electronically stored information (ESI) has created substantial challenges for organisations in every industry, particularly within legal proceedings and the disclosure process. eDisclosure teams frequently worked on-site, preserving copies of data from physical devices such as laptops and from on-premises Exchange servers...

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View the related Practice Notes about ESI

PRACTICE NOTES
Electronic Disclosure in Civil Litigation: Duties, Processes and Case Law under CPR 31 and PD 31B (England and Wales)

This Practice Note explains what electronic disclosure means and outlines the core tasks involved when handling electronic, or e‑disclosure, namely planning, collaboration, identification, preservation, collection, review and disclosure. It also addresses the approach to e‑disclosure at trial. ‘Electronic disclosure’ concerns the management of substantial volumes of electronically stored information (ESI), arising in a pre‑action or post‑issue setting. A sound grasp of e‑documents, e‑disclosure and your duties under CPR PD 31B (where applicable) is vital. For guidance on these aspects of disclosure, see the following Practice Notes: Disclosure in multi-track cases Case management—compliance Note: This Practice Note does not address the disclosure scheme operating in the Business and Property Courts. For relevant guidance, see: Disclosure Scheme (Business & Property Courts)—overview. Principal sources of information Key sources on the process are: CPR 31 Practice Direction 31B concerning electronic documents The EDQ (Electronic Documents Questionnaire annexed to PD31B) Additionally, the following is useful: ...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Electronic disclosure in international arbitration: planning, scope, metadata and technology, with guidance from IBA Rules, CPR PD 57AD/31B, ICC/LCIA/CIArb/ICDR/Prague Rules, and data protection considerations

How electronic disclosure is used in arbitration There is no single mandatory framework governing e-disclosure in arbitration. This aligns with the overarching principle that arbitral procedure remains adaptable, and that the tribunal is empowered to set the evidential rules in each individual case, subject to any agreement between the parties. As electronically stored information (ESI) will typically comprise a large share of the material in many arbitrations, careful planning is required to manage and deploy it throughout the proceedings so that parties can present their cases effectively without the exercise of producing the evidence becoming unduly burdensome. Note: in arbitration the phrase ‘document production’ is more commonly used than ‘disclosure’, although ‘e-disclosure’ is frequently applied in both senses and contexts. Ordinarily, parties in arbitration provide at an early stage the documents on which they rely. The opposing side may then seek any additional documents they wish to inspect, and any disagreement about whether such material should be produced is put before the tribunal for determination and resolution...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Electronic disclosure under the CPR: duties, EDQ, budgeting, compliance and sanctions, plus TAR and personal devices (England and Wales)

Electronic disclosure This Practice Note addresses common queries about electronic disclosure, covering what it entails, a solicitor’s duties in respect of it, the practical steps required, how to plan costs, and the consequences of non-compliance. It should be read alongside the Practice Notes: Introduction to electronic disclosure and Disclosure—technical glossary. Electronic disclosure refers to the efficient handling of (typically extensive) stores of electronically stored information (ESI), whether arising before proceedings or after issue. With ESI now pervasive across businesses and individuals, dispute lawyers must understand electronic disclosure and a legal representative’s responsibilities under CPR PD 31B. For additional guidance, consult the following Practice Notes: Disclosure in multi-track cases Case management—compliance This Practice Note does not address the disclosure scheme in the Business and Property Courts. Electronic disclosure will almost invariably be relevant to matters within that scheme; while the guidance here may assist, the specific provisions of the scheme must be reviewed in each instance...

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