Artificial Intelligence is no longer a futuristic concept-it is reshaping courts, constitutions, corporations, governments, and global governance. From algorithmic decision-making and autonomous systems to surveillance, elections, and human rights, AI presents unprecedented legal challenges that demand a rigorous and structured legal response.
Law and Artificial Intelligence offers a comprehensive, academically grounded exploration of how modern legal systems confront intelligent technologies. Designed for JD, LLB, LLM students, legal scholars, policymakers, and practitioners, this book systematically examines AI through constitutional law, human rights law, administrative law, criminal justice, corporate governance, competition law, international law, and emerging regulatory frameworks.
This book goes beyond theory. It analyzes real governance models, risk-based regulation, accountability mechanisms, and comparative approaches adopted across the United States, European Union, United Kingdom, China, and Global South jurisdictions. Special focus is given to AI risk assessment, autonomous systems regulation, democracy and elections, and future legal institutions.
Written in a clear, structured, and exam-ready format, this book equips readers to understand not only how law reacts to AI-but how law must actively shape AI to preserve human dignity, democratic legitimacy, fairness, and the rule of law in an algorithmic age.
Whether used as a primary textbook, reference guide, or policy resource, this work serves as an essential foundation for anyone engaging with the future of law and technology.