Research Handbook on the Law of Artificial Intelligence
Edited by Woodrow Barfield and
Ugo Pagallo
in Books from Edward Elgar Publishing
Abstract:
This second edition provides a broad range of perspectives on the legal implications of artificial intelligence (AI) across different global jurisdictions. Contributors identify the potential threats that AI poses to the protection of rights and human wellbeing, anticipating future developments in technological and legal infrastructures.
Keywords: Law and Technology Scholars; Regulators of Technology; Law Students and Scholars; Practising Attorney's (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
ISBN: 9781035316489
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https://www.elgaronline.com/doi/10.4337/9781035316496 (application/pdf)
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Chapters in this book:
- Ch Chapter 1 A computational thinking approach for law and artificial intelligence

- Woodrow Barfield
- Ch Chapter 10 The law–machine interface and the changing interplay between artificial intelligence and the law

- Peter K. Yu
- Ch Chapter 11 AI characterisations and their legal implications

- Jerrold Soh
- Ch Chapter 12 False agency in artificial intelligence

- Shawn Bayern
- Ch Chapter 13 Automated law enforcement: perfect vision or dystopia?

- Antje von Ungern-Sternberg
- Ch Chapter 14 Disaggregating artificial intelligence biases: a law and systems engineering approach for AI governance and regulation

- Emile Loza de Siles
- Ch Chapter 15 A blueprint for auditing generative AI

- Jakob Mökander, Justin Curl and Mihir Kshirsagar
- Ch Chapter 16 Crimes without criminals: in search of criminal liability for harms caused by AI systems

- Elina Nerantzi and Giovanni Sartor
- Ch Chapter 17 Criminal law enforcement through AI

- Serena Quattrocolo
- Ch Chapter 18 Artificial intelligence as evidence

- Daniel Seng
- Ch Chapter 19 Artificial intention, unintended contracts

- Eliza Mik
- Ch Chapter 2 Control, influence, and manipulation: AI has a power problem

- Michael Guihot
- Ch Chapter 20 Contract law and advances in artificial intelligence

- John Linarelli
- Ch Chapter 21 Managing fairness risk of AI in consumer finance

- David M. Skanderson and Adam H. Gailey
- Ch Chapter 22 Civil liability and artificial intelligence: challenges, policy options and legal responses

- Teresa Rodríguez de las Heras Ballell
- Ch Chapter 23 European Union’s Regulation on the placing on the market and use of AI systems: a critical overview of the AI Act

- Nathalie Nevejans
- Ch Chapter 24 Adding to the EU AI Liability Directive: degree of autonomy, chain of confidence, inherent flaws of indecent induction, and mandatory insurance

- Ronald P. Loui
- Ch Chapter 25 Consumer law and artificial intelligence

- Przemysław Pałka and Agnieszka Jabłonowska
- Ch Chapter 26 A tale of obsession: is autonomous algorithmic collusion the white whale of competition law?

- Jerome De Cooman
- Ch Chapter 27 Robots in the boardroom: artificial intelligence and corporate law

- Florian Möslein
- Ch Chapter 28 Taxation of artificial intelligence

- Xavier Oberson
- Ch Chapter 29 When machines create: AI authorship and copyright law

- Ryan Abbott and Elizabeth Rothman
- Ch Chapter 3 AI Bill of Rights and creative lawmaking

- John Frank Weaver
- Ch Chapter 30 Copyright, fair use, and AI technology development: time to sunset the “transformative purpose” test

- S.J. Blodgett-Ford
- Ch Chapter 31 Reorienting patent policy towards responsible AI design

- Liza Vertinsky
- Ch Chapter 4 Three paradigms in the legal governance of AI: on power, convenience, and prestige

- Ugo Pagallo
- Ch Chapter 5 Compliance, Regtech, and smart legal ecosystems: a methodology for legal governance validation

- Pompeu Casanovas, Mustafa Hashmi, Louis de Koker and Ho-Pun Lam
- Ch Chapter 6 The Japanese perspective of regulation, management, and governance of artificial intelligence

- Fumio Shimpo
- Ch Chapter 7 How artificial intelligence will affect the practice of law

- Yueh-Hsuan Weng and David Torabi
- Ch Chapter 8 Three years of evolution in AI law and governance: as the law catches up to AI

- Michael Simon and Andrew Pery
- Ch Chapter 9 Lawyers are from Mars, data scientists are from Venus: promoting responsible AI on Earth

- Hofit Wasserman-Rozen and Karni Chagal-Feferkorn
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:elg:eebook:22539
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