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Parent-child relationships is a term used in e-discovery to describe a chain of documents that stems from a single e-mail or storage folder. These types of relationships are primarily encountered when a party is faced with a discovery request for e-mail. A child (i.e., an attachment) is connected to or embedded in the parent (i.e., an e-mail or Zip file) directly above it.
Parent-child relationships is a term used in e-discovery to describe a chain of documents that stems from a single e-mail or storage folder. These types of relationships are primarily encountered when a party is faced with a discovery request for e-mail. A "child" (i.e., an attachment) is connected to or embedded in the "parent" (i.e., an e-mail or Zip file) directly above it.
- Browse Related Terms: Attachment, Attachments, document, Document Date, e-Discovery, e-mail, EDD (Electronic Data Discovery), Electronic Mail Message, Email, Email String, Enterprise User Information (EUI), Full-Text Indexing and Search, Nesting, Parent-child Relationships, sibling