scholarly journals Michael Guihot and Lyria Bennett Moses (2020). Artificial Intelligence, Robots and the Law, LexisNexis Australia

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 158-159
Author(s):  
Nicholas Korpela

Nicholas Korpela reviews Michael Guihot and Lyria Bennett Moses (2020). Artificial Intelligence, Robots and the Law

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antônio Anselmo Martino ◽  
Eduardo Magrani ◽  
Lourenço Ribeiro Grossi Araújo ◽  
Yuri Alexandre dos Santos ◽  
Henry Colombi ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Tijana T. Ivancevic ◽  
Bojan Jovanovic ◽  
Sasa Jovanovic ◽  
Milka Djukic ◽  
Natalia Djukic ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Martin Partington

This chapter discusses the role both of those professionally qualified to practise law—solicitors and barristers—and of other groups who provide legal/advice services but who do not have professional legal qualifications. It examines how regulation of legal services providers is changing. It notes new forms of legal practice. It also considers how use of artificial intelligence may change the ways in which legal services are delivered. It reflects on the adjudicators and other dispute resolvers who play a significant role in the working of the legal system. It reflects on the contribution to legal education made by law teachers, in universities and in private colleges, to the formation of the legal profession and to the practice of the law.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annette Guckelberger

The digitalisation of Administration is unstoppable. E-Government must deal with artificial intelligence, blockchain, mobile and open government as well as legal implications of digitalisation for the organisation of administration as well as administrative procedures. The Handbook on the Law of Electronic Administration deals with the entire spectrum of digital administration, with analysis of deficits, and practical solutions, taking all legal levels (EU, federal and state law) into account, by a single author. Using demonstrative examples, the work follows administration on its digital transformation process by, for example, presenting the following brand new topics: Portal interconnection, digital cabinet, digital ministries; Gov Bots, robotic process automation, process mining, artificial intelligence (AI); Legal nature, transparency and control of algorithms; Legal assessment of automated administrative decisions. Up to date The new EU regulation on the single digital gateway and other current changes (digital pact for schools, internet-based vehicle registration) have been considered. Annette Guckelberger is Professor of Public Law at the Saarland University. Digitalisation issues relating to state and administration law have long been among her main areas of research, as her pioneering study on the transition to (exclusively) electronic promulgation of the law in Germany and her presentation on E-Government at the conference of the German Association of Public Law Professors have shown.


2019 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-11
Author(s):  
Pompeu Casanovas ◽  
Jianfu Chen ◽  
David Wishart

We introduce both the new inception of Law in Context - A Socio-legal Journal and the continuing issue of LiC 36 (1). The editorial provides a brief historical account of the Journal since its inception in the early 1980s, in the context of the evolution of the Law & Society movement. It also describes the changes produced in the digital age by the emergence of the Web of Data, Big Data, and the Internet of Things. The convergence between Law & Society and Artificial Intelligence & Law is also discussed. Finally, we introduce briefly the articles included in this issue.          


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Sébastien Lafrance

AbstractThis paper explores various impacts of artificial intelligence (“AI”) on the law, and the practice of law more specifically, for example the use of predictive tools. The author also examines some of the innovations but also limits of AI in the context of the legal profession as well as some ethical and legal issues raised by the use and evolution of AI in the legal area.


Author(s):  
I Ketut Sukewati Lanang Putra Perbawa

Revolution Industry 4.0 is one of the biggest era in this century, because in this era the big technological development happening around the world with some of the creation is Artificial Intelligence. Artificial Intelligence is one of the technology that exist in the world and can resembles like a human in the other hand Artificial Intelligence can do what actually human do for example Learning, Planning, Critical Thinking, Problem Solving, any many more. Therefore several countries using it in the court. Artificial Intelligence use it as evidence to prove some case and made prosecutor, judge and lawyer easier to work. However, in Indonesia there wasn’t the law about Artificial Intelligence therefore it would be difficult to use it in the court as evidence because according to several sources in procedural law there are some valid evidence that can only use in the court. However, the crime that happen in Indonesia usually related to technology made all the government have to forming the law about the Artificial Intelligence. 


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (3(65)) ◽  
pp. 133-145
Author(s):  
Татьяна Анатольевна ПОЛЯКОВА ◽  
Гульфия Гафиятовна КАМАЛОВА

The paper is devoted to contemporary problems of legal support for the development, introduction and use of artificial intelligence and robotics systems as one of the vectors of the development of Russian information law. The purpose of the study is to The aim of the study is to gain scientific insight into the place of a set of legal norms governing relations associated with this digital technology in the system of modern Russian law. In the course of the study, a group of interrelated methods is used, the choice of which is determined by the subject of scientific work, including system analysis, generalization, and the formal-logical method. As a result of the study, it is concluded that at present there are objective conditions and the need to establish a complex legal institution – the law of artificial intelligence in the information law system. The paper substantiates the complex nature of this institution and notes that the law of artificial intelligence, being a complex formation, is associated with a group of legal institutions of information law – institutions of personal data, information of limited access, Internet law, identification, responsibility in the information sphere and others.


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