Research initiation workshop on legal consciousness in the tech community

25 april 2025 09:00 – 17:00 Forumhuset, Lecture hall BIO

How do computer scientists and software developers perceive the law? The aim of the initiation is to bring together scholars from legal science and computer science to discuss the issue of legal consciousness in the tech community.

The legal regulation of technology, such as AI, has been a priority for policymakers worldwide over the past decade. Lawmakers are working to address and anticipate the socio-economic challenges that arise, or may arise, from the development and use of new technologies. Simultaneously, much of the regulatory burden is delegated to private entities, such as standardization bodies and social media platforms, which establish their own systems of governance. The actual implementation of these regulations falls however on the tech community, specifically software developers and engineers. This community is increasingly pressured to comply with the growing number of regulations while developing new technologies. Consequently, the question arises: How much is being “lost in translation” between these two professional groups?

The goal of the research initiation is to design a research project, which studies empirically the communication between lawyers and the tech community, with the goal of providing methodological tools to enhance the legal understanding of tech professionals who work with development of the new technology. The initiative consists of three workshops: on 25 April in Örebro, on 26 May in Turin (Italy), and on 16 June in Florence (Italy).

Location: Forumhuset, Lecture hall "BIO"

9.00-9.10 Introduction

9.10-9.50 Presentation on legal consciousness research by Erin Jackson (University of Groningen)

9.50-10.20 Discussion

10.20-10.40 Coffee break

10.40-11.10 Presentation on the ERRATUM Project by Helle Krunke (Law) and Christina Lioma (Computer science), University of Copenhagen

11.10-11.30  Discussion

11.30-11.45  Presentation on the project ‘Agent Based Modeling and Simulation for Law’ by Mais Qandeel (Law) and Franziska Klügl (Computer science), University of Örebro

11.45-12.00 Discussion

12.00-13.15 Lunch break

13.15-14.30 Short presentations of the participants followed by discussions with the aim of exploring the state of the art (Martin Ebers, Eleonor Kristoffersson, Paul Friedl)

14.30-14.50 Coffee break

14.50-16.00 Short presentations of the participants followed by discussions with the aim of exploring the state of the art (Andrea Simoncini, Erik Longo, Moritz Schramm)

16.00-17.00 Discussion on the research questions and potential funders