Botswana’s current trajectory suggests gradual, cautious change. CRMS will expand, e-filing will reach more courts, video hearings will increase, and younger legal professionals will continue adopting tech. That is the most realistic path.
But with vision, coordination, and proper funding, we could move much faster.
We already have a foundation: CRMS, policy frameworks, a tech-aware legal community. What is missing is the will to act boldly. Perhaps public demand – or the rising costs of inefficiency – will change that.
Because here is the bottom line: Botswana stands at a crossroads.
We can inch forward with slow, safe steps. Or we can make the leap – embracing comprehensive, thoughtful reform that reimagines how justice is delivered.
Other countries are not waiting. They are implementing. They are attracting investment and building public trust with modern, responsive legal systems. The tools exist. The economic case is solid. The opportunity is right here.
Digital Justice is not just about installing new systems in old buildings. It is about fulfilling age-old promises – fairness, accessibility, accountability – using today’s tools. Botswana has a chance to lead this transformation in southern Africa. Whether we seize it or let it pass us by will define our justice system for generations to come. Cautious optimism is fair, sure. But make no mistake: the clock is still ticking, and change is coming – slowly, stubbornly, and surely.