AI practices in the international court of justice

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The International Court of Justice (ICJ) employs the best AI use cases to ensure impartial justice.

In 2016, the ICJ became a Partner Organization of UNICC, benefiting from UNICC’s expertise and comprehensive understanding of digital business and technological environments, including innovative technologies, business efficiency, cost savings, and volume discounts based on the scope of engagements.

UNICC has advised, designed, and delivered a number of business optimizations to help ICJ embrace cloud computing, including a refresh of ICJ’s enterprise applications stack and technology services, including business continuity during the COVID-19 pandemic, in accordance with the UN Secretary-New General’s Technologies Strategy.

UNICC aided the Court with an ICT strategy assessment, architectural technology planning, public website support, network infrastructure assessment, ICT process enhancements, and business continuity and disaster recovery plans from the start.

Mobility support (smartphones, tablets, laptops, etc.), changes to collaboration platforms (SharePoint and Microsoft Exchange), security assessments, and line-of-business support for older applications were all areas where improvements were made. Throughout the process, there were useful technology assessment sessions to ensure that ICJ’s essential changes were in line with industry best practices.

The seat of ICJ at The Hague.

Since 2017, the International Court of Justice has had its website hosted by UNICC, which uses a globally load-balanced content delivery network (CDN) and sophisticated security protection (DDoS).

In 2017, UNICC equipped ICJ with a fully managed messaging and communications system, which included dedicated and completely redundant Microsoft Exchange 2016 and Skype for business telephone, resulting in cost reductions, improved integration, and 24/7 support.

UNICC aided ICJ in completing an on-site and remote assessment in June 2018 to better understand current workspace setups, feature demands, and suggest a solution for the implementation and maintenance of Windows 10, Office 365, and related infrastructure.

In light of the ICJ’s unique computer environment, UNICC offered security criteria based on industry best practices from the Centre for Internet Security.

As a result, ICJ joined the Common Secure Threat Intel Network, which exchanges timely, relevant, and actionable physical and cyber security threat and incident information, boosting ICJ’s capacity to prepare for, respond to, and mitigate risks associated with these threats.

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