U.S. courts have long recognized that certain civil cases should not be litigated in the United States. Even when a U.S. court has jurisdiction, a case may stil
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![]() Free LLMs Hallucinate and Rarely Signal Their Limitations in Solving Legal Problems by Andrzej Porębski, Jakub Figura :: SSRNIn this study, the ability of two free large language models (LLMs), GPT-4o mini and Bielik-11B-v2, to solve simple legal problems was tested. The general corre State Constitutional Rights to Privacy by Tiffany C. Li :: SSRN
DIGNITY UNDER LAW: A GLOBAL HANDBOOK FOR JURISTS by James R. May, Erin Daly :: SSRN
This Handbook provides advocates, lawyers, judges, and others with the tools they need to advance the dignity of all persons, including the most vulnerable amon
Beyond Democracy: How a Free Press Supports the Rule of Law by Erin Carroll :: SSRNWidespread agreement has existed for centuries that a free press is essential to democracy. But legal scholars have spent almost no effort thinking about why el Are Judges Politicians in Robes? Comparative Aspects of the Recruitment and Election of Judges in R Böttner and HJ Blanke (eds), The Rule of Law Under Threat: Eroding Institutions and European Reme...
The authors engage in discussions on the process of nominating judges in the context of their potential political role. The chapter delves into the intricacies
THE LIMITS OF JUDICIAL POWER TO INTERPRET LEGISLATION by Lisa Burton Crawford :: SSRNThis article reconsiders the limits of judicial power to interpret legislation. It is said that Australian courts have no power to choose the meaning of legisla Teaching Dobbs: On The Role Of Ideology In Constitutional Interpretation by Steven J. Heyman :: SSRN
The EU Interinstitutional Body for Ethical Standards: A Legal and Policy Analysis by Alberto Alemanno :: SSRNAlemanno, Alberto, The EU Interinstitutional Body for Ethical Standards: Legal Change Through Precedents by Priscila Andrade, Guilherme Almeida, Noel Struchiner, Ivar Hannikainen :: SSRN
When does the law change in a system of precedents? The answer depends on how precedent is to be understood. There are three in
The Brussels Effect by Graham Greenleaf :: SSRN
The expression ‘the Brussels effect’ is often used rather loosely to refer to any or all of the ways by which EU legislative standards come to be adopted in the
Creating Domestic Legal Frameworks on International Crimes: Case Studies of France, Iraq, United Kingdom and United States by Mohammed Alharbi :: SSRNAlharbi, Mohammed, Creating Domestic Legal Frameworks on International Crimes: Case Studies of France, Iraq, United Kingdom and United States (February 08, 2025). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=5129094 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.5129094 A Systematic Literature Review of Artificial Intelligence (AI) Transparency Laws in the European Union (EU) and United Kingdom (UK): A Socio-Legal Approach to AI Transparency Governance by Joshua K...This systematic literature review examines AI transparency laws and governance in the European Union (EU) and the United Kingdom (UK) through a socio-legal lens Message Undeliverable: An Empirical Assessment of the (Un)Readability of Canadian Court Decisions by Mike Madden :: SSRNThis article reports on two original empirical studies of the quantitative readability of Canadian court decisions, across court levels and across legal subject A Constitution of Values? Principles and Values in the Commonwealth Constitution by George Duke :: SSRNRecent Australian public law scholarship has demonstrated an increasing interest in the theme of constitutional values. In the current paper I seek to clarify t China's Constitutional Moment by Mark Jia :: SSRNThis chapter surveys Chinese constitutional developments in the first quarter of the twenty-first century. This period corresponds roughly with the tenure of Hu International Courts and Selective Restraint in Times of Backlash by Ezgi Yildiz, Umut Yüksel :: SSRNInternational courts operate under scrutiny and are often on the receiving end of criticism from states. Insights from the judicial behavior literature suggest Australasian Law in 1,000 Databases: The Evolution of AustLII by Andrew Mowbray, Philip Chung, Graham Greenleaf :: SSRN
Since 1995, the Australasian Legal Information Institute (AustLII) has provided national legal research infrastructure that is fundamental to the operation of t
Vertical Stare Decisis by Vasan Kesavan :: SSRNThe subject of stare decisis has occupied considerable scholarly attention over the years, so much so that one could fill a small log cabin with its pages. Yet Codifying The Law Of Evidence—From Stare Decisis Domination To Codifcation’s Innovation by Ken Chasse :: SSRNThis article advocates the codification of the law of evidence in Canada so as to limit its present dependence upon case law development—it contains a proposed Scientific Educations Among U.S. Judges by Christa Laser :: SSRNShould more judges have technical and scientific educations than is currently prevalent in the federal judiciary? This empirical study of the educational backgr CriMOnto: A generalized domain-specific ontology for modeling procedural norms of the Lebanese criminal law - ScienceDirectCriminal (or penal) law regulates offenses, offenders, and legal punishments. Modeling criminal law is gaining much attention in the ontology engineer… The Worldwide Governance Indicators : Methodology and 2024 Update by Daniel Kaufmann, Aart Kraay :: SSRN
This paper provides an overview of the data sources and aggregation methodology for the Worldwide Governance Indicators (WGI). The WGI report six aggrega
Judging Readability: A Study of Opinions by Apex-Court Judges from Australia, Canada, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the United States by Mike Madden :: SSRNLittle is known about the extent to which readability differences exist between opinions written by different apex court judges, or about the potential biograph Ideological Polarization on Constitutional Courts: Evidence from Spain by Arthur Dyevre, Andreu Rodilla Lazaro :: SSRNDyevre, Arthur and Rodilla Lazaro, Andreu, Ideological Polarization on Constitutional Courts: Evidence from Spain (February 04, 2025). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=5124478 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.5124478 |