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Is Law Computable?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 343

Is Law Computable?

  • Categories: Law

From rule of law to legal singularity / Simon Deakin and Christopher Markou -- Ex machina Lex : exploring the limits of legal computability / Christopher Markou and Simon Deakin -- Code-driven law : freezing the future and scaling the past / Mireille Hildebrandt -- Towards a democratic singularity? algorithmic governmentality, the eradication of politics and the possibility of resistance / John Morison -- Legal singularity and the reflexivity of law / Jennifer Cobbe -- Artificial intelligence + legal singularity : the thin end of the wedge, the thick end of the wedge / Roger Brownsword -- Automated systems and the need for change / Sylvie Delacroix -- Punishing artificial intelligence : legal fiction or science fiction / Ryan Abbott and Alex Sarch -- Not a single singularity / Lyria Bennett Moses -- The law of contested concepts? Reflections on Copyright Law and the legal and technological singularities / Dilan Thampapillai -- Capacitas ex machina : are computerised assessments of mental capacity a 'red line' or benchmark for AI? / Christopher Markou and Lily Hands.

Law's Rule
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 401

Law's Rule

The rule of law, once widely embraced and emulated, now faces serious threats to its viability. To get our bearings we must return to first principles. This book articulates and defends a comprehensive, coherent, and compelling conception of the rule of law and defends it against serious challenges to its intelligibility, relevance, and normative force. The rule of law's ambition, it argues, is to provide protection and recourse against the arbitrary exercise of power using the distinctive tools of the law. Law provides a bulwark of protection, a bridle on the powerful, and a bond constituting and holding together the polity and giving public expression to an ideal mode of association. Two p...

Money, Power, and AI
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 263

Money, Power, and AI

  • Categories: Law

In this ambitious collection, Zofia Bednarz and Monika Zalnieriute bring together leading experts to shed light on how artificial intelligence (AI) and automated decision-making (ADM) create new sources of profits and power for financial firms and governments. Chapter authors—which include public and private lawyers, social scientists, and public officials working on various aspects of AI and automation across jurisdictions—identify mechanisms, motivations, and actors behind technology used by Automated Banks and Automated States, and argue for new rules, frameworks, and approaches to prevent harms that result from the increasingly common deployment of AI and ADM tools. Responding to the opacity of financial firms and governments enabled by AI, Money, Power and AI advances the debate on scrutiny of power and accountability of actors who use this technology. This title is available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

Quantitative Methods in Comparative Law
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 201

Quantitative Methods in Comparative Law

  • Categories: Law

This invaluable and timely book provides a comprehensive “Conflict Prevention and Friction Analysis (CPFA) Model” for researching comparative law in our increasingly technology-led legal and economic order. It provides an in-depth examination of practical case studies, showcasing the real-world application of quantitative methods and theoretical approaches for analysing legal issues.

Rethinking Law, Regulation, and Technology
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 272

Rethinking Law, Regulation, and Technology

  • Categories: Law

This insightful book presents a radical rethinking of the relationship between law, regulation, and technology. While in traditional legal thinking technology is neither of particular interest nor concern, this book treats modern technologies as doubly significant, both as major targets for regulation and as potential tools to be used for legal and regulatory purposes. It explores whether our institutions for engaging with new technologies are fit for purpose.

We, the Robots?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 311

We, the Robots?

Explains how artificial intelligence is pushing the limits of the law and how we must respond.

The Legal Singularity
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 179

The Legal Singularity

  • Categories: Law

Law today is incomplete, inaccessible, unclear, underdeveloped, and often perplexing to those whom it affects. In The Legal Singularity, Abdi Aidid and Benjamin Alarie argue that the proliferation of artificial intelligence–enabled technology – and specifically the advent of legal prediction – is on the verge of radically reconfiguring the law, our institutions, and our society for the better. Revealing the ways in which our legal institutions underperform and are expensive to administer, the book highlights the negative social consequences associated with our legal status quo. Given the infirmities of the current state of the law and our legal institutions, the silver lining is that t...

Personal Identity and the European Court of Human Rights
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 339

Personal Identity and the European Court of Human Rights

  • Categories: Law

In this new and burgeoning field in legal and human rights thought, this edited collection explores, by reference to applied philosophy and case law, how the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) has developed and presented a right to personal identity, largely through interpretation of Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights. Divided into three parts, the collection interrogates: firstly, the construction of personal identity rights at the ECtHR; secondly, whose identity rights are protected; and thirdly, the limits of identity rights. The collection is the first in the Routledge Studies in Law and Humanity series. Contributions from nine leading and emerging legal scholars fr...

A Research Agenda for Comparative Law
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 237

A Research Agenda for Comparative Law

  • Categories: Law

This prescient Research Agenda explores how comparative law has developed significantly in this century, offering insights into different perspectives on its scope, methods and outlook. It addresses the similarities and differences between legal systems and traditions, expressing why pluralistic methodology strengthens comparative law as a discipline.

International Law and the Protection of “Climate Refugees”
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 230

International Law and the Protection of “Climate Refugees”

  • Categories: Law

This book studies the topic of forced climate migrants (commonly referred to as “climate refugees”) through the lens of international law and identifies the reasons why these migrants should be granted international protection. Through an analysis focused on climate change and human rights international law, it points out the legal principles and rules upon which an international obligation to protect persons forced to migrate due to climate change is emerging. Sciaccaluga advocates for a state obligation to protect climate migrants when their origin countries have become extremely environmentally fragile due to climate change—to the point of becoming unable to guarantee the exercise of inalienable human rights in their territories. Turning to the future, this book then investigates the current elements on which a “forced climate migrants law” could be built, ultimately arguing for the duty to provide some form of assistance to forced climate migrants in a third state within the international legal system.