As part of the Institute’s 32nd annual Forum for State Appellate Court Judges, Artificial Intelligence and the Courts, three law professor members of our faculty have authored original academic papers exploring in depth aspects the Forum topic. These papers, and the authors’ presentations of them, serve as the centerpiece for much of the Forum discussions.
Judicial Economy in the Age of AI by Prof. Yonathan Arbel, The University of Alabama School of Law
Artificial Intelligence, Judges, and Legal Ethics by Prof. Gary Marchant, Arizona State University, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law
AI and Evidence: What Should Judges Look For? by Prof. Penny White, University of Tennessee College of Law
Papers authored by panelists not as part of the Forum
AI in the Courts: How Worried Should We Be? Judicature (Grimm, Grossman, Coglianese)
Artificial Intelligence as Evidence (Grimm, Grossman, Cormack)
Artificial Justice: The Quandary of AI in the Courtroom (Grimm, Grossman, Gless, Hildebrandt)
Deepfakes in Court: How Judges Can Proactively Manage Alleged AI-Generated Material in National Security Cases (Dalal, Gao, Grimm, Grossman, Linna, Pulice, Subrahmanian, Tunheim)
Generative AI and the Legal System (Grossman)
Is Your Use of AI Violating the Law? An Overview of the Current Legal Landscape (Vogel, Chertoff, Wiley, Kahn)
Is Disclosure and Certification of the Use of Generative AI Really Necessary? Judicature (Grossman, Grimm, Brown)
The GPTJudge: Justice in a Generative AI World (Grossman, Grimm, Brown, Xu)