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Vol 4 No 2 (2022)
Vol. 4 No. 2 (2022): Law, Technology and Humans
Published:
2022-11-14
Introduction: Jurisprudence of the Future
Jurisprudence of the Future
1-4
Alex Green, Mitchell Travis, Kieran Tranter
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Symposium: Jurisprudence of the Future
Jurisprudence, Temporality and Science Fiction
5-23
Mitchell Travis
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Black/African Science Fiction and the Quest for Racial Justice through Legal Knowledge: How Can We Unsettle Euro-modern Time and Temporality in Our Teaching?
24-37
Foluke Adebisi
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Future Law, the Power of Prediction, and the Disappearance of Time
38-59
Rostam Josef Neuwirth
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The Importance of Dystopian Hypotheticals: Towards an Ethical Turn in Liberal Political Philosophy
60-80
Alex Green
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What If Feminist Judgments Were Written on Earth 616? A Tale of Feminism and Science Fiction
81-94
Kritika Sharma
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Reproductive Justice: The Final (Feminist) Frontier
95-108
Zoe Tongue
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Framing the Future: The Foundation Series, Foundation Models and Framing AI
109-123
Clare Williams
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The Rule of Law, Science Fiction, and Fears of Artificial Intelligence
124-136
Paul Burgess
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‘The Changes that Face Us’: Science Fiction as (Public) Legal Education
137-151
Craig Newbery-Jones
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Articles
Drones as Techno-legal Assemblages
152-165
Adam Smith
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The Promise and Perils of International Human Rights Law for AI Governance
166-182
Anna Su
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New Technologies and Law Firms—An Uneasy Relationship: A European Perspective
183-196
Salvatore Caserta
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Managing the Risks of Peer-to-Peer Goods-Sharing
197-215
Sally Zhu
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Law in a ‘Simulated’ Universe: The Educative Value of the Metaphor
216-229
Chris Dent
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Book Reviews
Nicole Perlroth (2021) This is How They Tell Me the World Ends: The Cyberweapons Arms Race. New York: Bloomsbury Publishing
230-232
Samuli Haataja
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Toby Walsh (2022) Machines Behaving Badly: The Morality of AI. Collingwood: La Trobe University Press and Black Inc Books
233-236
Nicholas Korpela
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Open Access Journal
ISSN 2652-4074
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