This essay argues that a defining characteristic of modern law – the distinctive way in which it judges its addressees – will disappear. After sketching the distinctive nature of modern law's judgment, I show that it is part of a broader regulatory paradigm (rule or East Coast regulation) which is itself being superseded. Technological management is the alternative regulatory paradigm and I examine its rise and salience, showing how it might, in combination with the advent of ubiquitous computing, machine learning and artificial intelligence, cure a range of alleged pathologies that mark contemporary legal systems. The essay also demonstrates why technological management is now our regulatory default, its salience flowing from changes in th...
This essay is an advanced draft of work that will be published in On Philosophy and American Law (Fr...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Law.The central concern of this thesis is the investigat...
The development of law and economics over the last half-century has expanded and reinforced a perc...
This is an experimental text with three voices. The first one is an autoethnographic study of being ...
The full-text version of this article1 offers a comprehensive re-assessment of the law review from t...
This article responds to a series of commentaries on my 1996 Web-posted article Last Writes? Re-asse...
Much has been written recently about new technology disrupting the traditional law firm model of pro...
Article by Roger Brownsword (Professor of Law and Director of TELOS, King's College London and Honor...
This article identifies and discusses three waves of technological disruption to the authority of la...
Throughout the twentieth century, prominent legal thinkers confidently predicted that law as it has ...
Let me begin by congratulating the Marquette Law Review on reaching the threshold of its 100th anniv...
(Version 1.0, Feb. 5, 1996)\ud This article - the original version of which was published on the aut...
Commenting on the close relationship between technological and legal developments, Grant Gilmore onc...
In response to widespread skepticism about the recent rise of “tech ethics”, many critics have calle...
This article introduces three ideas that are central to understanding the ways in which law and lega...
This essay is an advanced draft of work that will be published in On Philosophy and American Law (Fr...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Law.The central concern of this thesis is the investigat...
The development of law and economics over the last half-century has expanded and reinforced a perc...
This is an experimental text with three voices. The first one is an autoethnographic study of being ...
The full-text version of this article1 offers a comprehensive re-assessment of the law review from t...
This article responds to a series of commentaries on my 1996 Web-posted article Last Writes? Re-asse...
Much has been written recently about new technology disrupting the traditional law firm model of pro...
Article by Roger Brownsword (Professor of Law and Director of TELOS, King's College London and Honor...
This article identifies and discusses three waves of technological disruption to the authority of la...
Throughout the twentieth century, prominent legal thinkers confidently predicted that law as it has ...
Let me begin by congratulating the Marquette Law Review on reaching the threshold of its 100th anniv...
(Version 1.0, Feb. 5, 1996)\ud This article - the original version of which was published on the aut...
Commenting on the close relationship between technological and legal developments, Grant Gilmore onc...
In response to widespread skepticism about the recent rise of “tech ethics”, many critics have calle...
This article introduces three ideas that are central to understanding the ways in which law and lega...
This essay is an advanced draft of work that will be published in On Philosophy and American Law (Fr...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Law.The central concern of this thesis is the investigat...
The development of law and economics over the last half-century has expanded and reinforced a perc...