Ex Machina: Technological Disruption and the Future of Artificial Intelligence in Legal Writing

Technology is disrupting the practice of law and revolutionizing how lawyers work.  This revolution is made more powerful because it is increasingly coupled with a rigorous and scientific approach to the law.  In some ways, law is looking more like a Silicon Valley startup and less like the oak-pane...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: John Campbell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2021-01-01
Series:University of Bologna Law Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://bolognalawreview.unibo.it/article/view/12238
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spelling doaj-94d513cd0e3d49e7b79542b8ad8bc3362021-01-18T15:54:56ZengUniversity of BolognaUniversity of Bologna Law Review2531-61332021-01-015229432610.6092/issn.2531-6133/1223810543Ex Machina: Technological Disruption and the Future of Artificial Intelligence in Legal WritingJohn Campbell0University of Denver Sturm College of LawTechnology is disrupting the practice of law and revolutionizing how lawyers work.  This revolution is made more powerful because it is increasingly coupled with a rigorous and scientific approach to the law.  In some ways, law is looking more like a Silicon Valley startup and less like the oak-paneled law firms of the last 200 years.  As law, technology, and science merge, the implications for the profession are wide-sweeping.  This article explores persuasive legal writing, offering new thoughts on what the future will hold.  Specifically, this article pilots a method for applying technology and science to measure, analyze and improve persuasive legal writing, offering it as a proof of concept that anchors the article’s broader, and perhaps more controversial assertion.  Namely, more powerful and refined persuasive legal writing software tools, fueled by artificial intelligence, should and will disrupt and reshape significant portions of the legal space, including how legal writing is taught and how it is produced. The effect will be to view legal writing as more science, and less art. The next set of luminaries won’t rely on anecdote or intuition to teach or create legal writing; they will rely on software and data.https://bolognalawreview.unibo.it/article/view/12238legal technologylegal researchlegal writingempirical
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Campbell
spellingShingle John Campbell
Ex Machina: Technological Disruption and the Future of Artificial Intelligence in Legal Writing
University of Bologna Law Review
legal technology
legal research
legal writing
empirical
author_facet John Campbell
author_sort John Campbell
title Ex Machina: Technological Disruption and the Future of Artificial Intelligence in Legal Writing
title_short Ex Machina: Technological Disruption and the Future of Artificial Intelligence in Legal Writing
title_full Ex Machina: Technological Disruption and the Future of Artificial Intelligence in Legal Writing
title_fullStr Ex Machina: Technological Disruption and the Future of Artificial Intelligence in Legal Writing
title_full_unstemmed Ex Machina: Technological Disruption and the Future of Artificial Intelligence in Legal Writing
title_sort ex machina: technological disruption and the future of artificial intelligence in legal writing
publisher University of Bologna
series University of Bologna Law Review
issn 2531-6133
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Technology is disrupting the practice of law and revolutionizing how lawyers work.  This revolution is made more powerful because it is increasingly coupled with a rigorous and scientific approach to the law.  In some ways, law is looking more like a Silicon Valley startup and less like the oak-paneled law firms of the last 200 years.  As law, technology, and science merge, the implications for the profession are wide-sweeping.  This article explores persuasive legal writing, offering new thoughts on what the future will hold.  Specifically, this article pilots a method for applying technology and science to measure, analyze and improve persuasive legal writing, offering it as a proof of concept that anchors the article’s broader, and perhaps more controversial assertion.  Namely, more powerful and refined persuasive legal writing software tools, fueled by artificial intelligence, should and will disrupt and reshape significant portions of the legal space, including how legal writing is taught and how it is produced. The effect will be to view legal writing as more science, and less art. The next set of luminaries won’t rely on anecdote or intuition to teach or create legal writing; they will rely on software and data.
topic legal technology
legal research
legal writing
empirical
url https://bolognalawreview.unibo.it/article/view/12238
work_keys_str_mv AT johncampbell exmachinatechnologicaldisruptionandthefutureofartificialintelligenceinlegalwriting
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