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The Cambridge Handbook of Lawyering in the Digital Age (eBook)

Edited by: Larry A. DiMatteo, et al.

ISBN13: 9781108936194
Published: November 2021
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: eBook (ePub)
Price: £27.99
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With increasing digitalization and the evolution of artificial intelligence, the legal profession is on the verge of being transformed by automated technology (legal tech). This handbook examines these developments and the changing legal landscape by providing perspectives from multiple interested parties, including practitioners, academics, and legal tech companies from different legal systems. Scrutinizing the real implications posed by legal tech, the book advocates for an unbiased, cautious approach for the engagement of technology in legal practice. It also carefully addresses the core question of how to balance fears of industry takeover by technology with the potential for using legal tech to expand services and create value for clients. Together, chapters develop a framework for analyzing the costs and benefits of new technologies before implementing them into legal practice. This interdisciplinary collection features contributions from lawyers, social scientists, institutional officials, technologists, and current developers of e-law platforms and services.

  • Provides an up-to-date analysis of the current and possible uses of technology in legal practice, along with the regulatory initiatives in this area
  • Covers areas of both public and private law while addressing issues such as the role of government regulation and judicial use of technology
  • Offers a detailed perspective on the future of legal professions

Subjects:
Legal Practice Management, eBooks
Contents:
1. Lawyering in the Digital Age
Pietro Ortolani and Larry A. DiMatteo

Part I. Effects of Technology on Legal Practice:
2. Disruptive effects of legal tech
Larry A. DiMatteo, Jiang Christine Jiaying and Robert Thomas
3. The effects of technology on legal practice: from punch card to artificial intelligence?
Andrė Janssen and Tom J. Vennmanns
4. Legal drafting and automation
Benjamin Werthmann
5. Emerging rules on artificial intelligence: Trojan horses of ethics in the realm of law?
Florian Möslein and Maximilian Horn

Part II. Legal Tech and ADR:
6. Legal tech in ADR
Mateja Durovic and Franciszek Lech
7. A blockchain-based smart dispute resolution method
Alessandro Palombo, Raffaele Battaglini and Luigi Cantisani
8. Digital dispute resolution: blurring the boundaries of ADR
Pietro Ortolani

Part III. Legal Tech in Consumer Relations and Small Claims
9. Legal tech in consumer relations and small-value claims: a survey
Francisco de Elizalde
10. Regulation of legal services and access to justice in the digital age: a war report
Jin-Ho Verdonschot and Max Houben
11. Legal tech and EU consumer law
Martin Ebers
12. The two faces of legal tech in B2C relations
Eric Tjong Tjin Tai

Part IV. Legal Tech and Public Law:
13. Blockchain's heterotopia: technological infrastructures and lawyering in the public sector
Georgios Dimitropoulos
14. Fundamental rights and the use of artificial intelligence in court
Jean-Marc van Gyseghem
15. Legal tech in public administration: prospects and challenges
Antonios Kouroutakis

Part V. Legal Ethics and Societal Values Confront Technology:
16. Ethics guidelines for trustworthy AI
Michel Cannarsa
17. Ethical digital lawyering: technical and philosophical insights
Mathieu Guillermin, Arnaud Billion, Carine Copain-Héritier and Emmanuel de Vaujany
18. Law, disintermediation, and the future of trust
Christoph Kletzer

Part VI. Fate of the Legal Professions:
19. Lawyering somewhere between computation and the will to act: a digital age reflection
Jeffrey M. Lipshaw
20. Surviving the digital transformation – a method for lawyers to approach legal tech
Paw Fruerlund and Sebastian Peters
21. Road forward: promise and danger
Larry A. DiMatteo and Pietro Ortolani