In The News

Accueil 9 In the News 9 Reining in a Runaway Data Problem: The GW Proportionality Initiative Aims to ‘Right-size’ eDiscovery
Reining in a Runaway Data Problem: The GW Proportionality Initiative Aims to ‘Right-size’ eDiscovery
novembre 24, 2020

The volume of electronically stored information (ESI) continues to grow exponentially, most recently due to the surge in corporate adoption of chat, messaging and collaboration apps. Some eDiscovery experts are coming together to formalize a solution on a systemic level that will create a defensible, transparent, repeatable approach to right-size discovery. 

The GW Proportionality Initiative

Since the 2015 amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP), the focus has shifted to emphasize proportionality in eDiscovery. But the attempt at balancing benefit vs. burden to determine proportionality has been a frustratingly subjective process.

As reported in eDiscovery Today, The James F. Humphreys Complex Litigation Center of The George Washington University Law School has embarked on a project to develop a proportionality benefit-and-burden model that provides a practical means for assessing claims of proportionality by plaintiff and defense counsel. The model is intended to provide a structured methodology to identify relevant custodians and data sources in order to present a clearer picture of the needs of the case, facilitate negotiations, and better inform the bench.

John Rabiej, former Director of Duke Law School Center for Judicial Studies, is partnering with the Humphreys Complex Litigation Center to lead the initiative. The steering committee and editorial board include numerous judges, attorneys, and eDiscovery experts, including CDS’ own William W. Belt, Jr., Managing Director, Consulting. “The 2015 Rule changes laid the foundation for the critical next step – practical strategies and workflows that better align eDiscovery with the first goal of the first rule of legal proceedings in FRCP 1: ‘the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action and proceeding,’ Bill said. “I’m looking forward to co-chairing one of the four teams on this initiative, and to working with GW Law, my law school alma mater.”

The model is targeted to be published for public comment by the end of the year. The Complex Litigation Center plans to hold an online bench-bar conference on the proportionality model on mars 25-26, 2021. Feedback will be sought from all quarters of the legal profession and eDiscovery experts will be sought and seriously considered by the project’s editorial board before it issues a final version.

Public Sector Forum

Join public sector leaders for practical legal, FOIA, compliance, and AI insights through case studies, hands-on learning, and expert sessions.

Find out more

Relativity Fest London 2026

Event: Relativity Fest London 2026 Date: juin 15-16, 2026 Location: Convene 133 Houndsditch Complete Discovery Source will be sponsoring Relativity Fest London 2026 and will be on the ground in […]

Find out more

Recent News