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Privacy Statement    


Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes is committed to protecting your privacy and developing technology that gives you the most powerful and safe online experience. This Statement of Privacy applies to the Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes Web site and governs data collection and usage. By using the Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes website, you consent to the data practices described in this statement.

Collection of your Personal Information

Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes collects personally identifiable information, such as your e-mail address, name, home or work address or telephone number. Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes also collects anonymous demographic information, which is not unique to you, such as your ZIP code, age, gender, preferences, interests and favorites.

There is also information about your computer hardware and software that is automatically collected by Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes. This information can include: your IP address, browser type, domain names, access times and referring Web site addresses. This information is used by Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes for the operation of the service, to maintain quality of the service, and to provide general statistics regarding use of the Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes Web site.

Please keep in mind that if you directly disclose personally identifiable information or personally sensitive data through Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes public message boards, this information may be collected and used by others. Note: Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes does not read any of your private online communications.

Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes encourages you to review the privacy statements of Web sites you choose to link to from Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes so that you can understand how those Web sites collect, use and share your information. Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes is not responsible for the privacy statements or other content on Web sites outside of the Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes and Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes family of Web sites.

Use of your Personal Information

Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes collects and uses your personal information to operate the Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes Web site and deliver the services you have requested. Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes also uses your personally identifiable information to inform you of other products or services available from Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes and its affiliates. Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes may also contact you via surveys to conduct research about your opinion of current services or of potential new services that may be offered.

Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes does not sell, rent or lease its customer lists to third parties. Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes may, from time to time, contact you on behalf of external business partners about a particular offering that may be of interest to you. In those cases, your unique personally identifiable information (e-mail, name, address, telephone number) is not transferred to the third party. In addition, Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes may share data with trusted partners to help us perform statistical analysis, send you email or postal mail, provide customer support, or arrange for deliveries. All such third parties are prohibited from using your personal information except to provide these services to Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes, and they are required to maintain the confidentiality of your information.

Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes does not use or disclose sensitive personal information, such as race, religion, or political affiliations, without your explicit consent.

Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes keeps track of the Web sites and pages our customers visit within Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes, in order to determine what Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes services are the most popular. This data is used to deliver customized content and advertising within Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes to customers whose behavior indicates that they are interested in a particular subject area.

Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes Web sites will disclose your personal information, without notice, only if required to do so by law or in the good faith belief that such action is necessary to: (a) conform to the edicts of the law or comply with legal process served on Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes or the site; (b) protect and defend the rights or property of Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes; and, (c) act under exigent circumstances to protect the personal safety of users of Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes, or the public.

Use of Cookies

The Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes Web site use "cookies" to help you personalize your online experience. A cookie is a text file that is placed on your hard disk by a Web page server. Cookies cannot be used to run programs or deliver viruses to your computer. Cookies are uniquely assigned to you, and can only be read by a web server in the domain that issued the cookie to you.

One of the primary purposes of cookies is to provide a convenience feature to save you time. The purpose of a cookie is to tell the Web server that you have returned to a specific page. For example, if you personalize Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes pages, or register with Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes site or services, a cookie helps Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes to recall your specific information on subsequent visits. This simplifies the process of recording your personal information, such as billing addresses, shipping addresses, and so on. When you return to the same Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes Web site, the information you previously provided can be retrieved, so you can easily use the Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes features that you customized.

You have the ability to accept or decline cookies. Most Web browsers automatically accept cookies, but you can usually modify your browser setting to decline cookies if you prefer. If you choose to decline cookies, you may not be able to fully experience the interactive features of the Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes services or Web sites you visit.

Security of your Personal Information

Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes secures your personal information from unauthorized access, use or disclosure. Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes secures the personally identifiable information you provide on computer servers in a controlled, secure environment, protected from unauthorized access, use or disclosure. When personal information (such as a credit card number) is transmitted to other Web sites, it is protected through the use of encryption, such as the Secure Socket Layer (SSL) protocol.

Changes to this Statement

Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes will occasionally update this Statement of Privacy to reflect company and customer feedback. Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes encourages you to periodically review this Statement to be informed of how Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes is protecting your information.

Contact Information

Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes welcomes your comments regarding this Statement of Privacy. If you believe that Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes has not adhered to this Statement, please contact Institute for the Study of Judicial Processes at kwjolly@utep.edu. We will use commercially reasonable efforts to promptly determine and remedy the problem.