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AI + Access to Justice Current Projects

Jurix ’24 AI + A2J Schedule

On December 11, 2024, in Brno, Czechia & online, we held our second annual AI for Access to Justice Workshop at the JURIX Conference.

The academic workshop is organized by Quinten Steenhuis, Suffolk University Law School/LIT Lab, Margaret Hagan, Stanford Law School/ Legal Design Lab, and Hannes Westermann, Maastricht University Faculty of Law.

In Autumn 2024, there was a very competitive application process, and 22 papers and 5 demo’s were selected.

The following presentations all come with a 10-page research paper or a shorter paper for the demo’s. The accepted paper drafts are available at this Google Drive folder.

Thank you to all of the contributors and participants in the workshop!

Session 1: AI for A2J Planning – Risks, Limits, Strategies

  • LLMs & Legal Aid: Understanding Legal Needs Exhibited Through User Queries: Michal Kuk and Jakub Harašta
  • Spreading the Risk of Scalable Legal Services: The Role of Insurance in Expanding Access to Justice, David Chriki, Harel Omer and Roee Amir
  • Exploring the potential and limitations of AI to enhance children’s access to justice, Boglárka Jánoskúti Dr. and Dóra Kiss Dr.
  • Health Insurance Coverage Rules Interpretation Corpus: Law, Policy, and Medical Guidance for Health Insurance Coverage Understanding, Mike Gartner

Session 2: AI for Legal Aid Services – Part A

  • Utilizing Large Language Models for Legal Aid Triage, Amit Haim and Christoph Engel
  • Measuring What Matters: Developing Human-Centered Legal Q-and-A Quality Standards through Multi-Stakeholder Research, Margaret Hagan
  • Demo: Digital Transformation in Child and Youth Welfare: A Concept for Implementing a Web-based Counseling Assistant Florian Gerlach

Session 3: AI for Legal Aid Services – Part B

  • Demo: Green Advice: Using RAG for Actionable Legal Information, Repairosaurus Rex , Nicholas Burka, Ali Cook, Sam Flynn, Sateesh Nori
  • Demo: ​​Inclusive AI design for justice in low-literacy environments, Avanti Durani and Shivani Sathe
  • Managing Administrative Law Cases using an Adaptable Model-driven Norm-enforcing Tool, Marten Steketee, Nina Verheijen and L. Thomas van Binsbergen
  • A Legal Advisor Bot Towards Access to Justice: Adam Kaczmarczyk, Tomer Libal and Aleksander Smywiński-Pohl
  • Electrified Apprenticeship: An AI Learning Platform for Law Clinics and Beyond: Brian Rhindress and Matt Samach

Session 4: NLP for access to justice

  • Demo: LIA: An AI-Powered Legal Information Assistant to Close the Access to Justice Gap, Scheree Gilchrist and Helen Hobson
  • Using Chat-GPT to Extract Principles of Law for the Sake of Prediction: an Exploration conducted on Italian Judgments concerning LGBT(QIA+) Rights, Marianna Molinari, Marinella Quaranta, Ilaria Angela Amantea and Guido Governatori
  • Legal Education and Knowledge Accessibility by Legal LLM, Sieh-Chuen Huang, Wei-Hsin Wang, Chih-Chuan Fan and Hsuan-Lei Shao
  • Evaluating Generative Language Models with Argument Attack Chains, Cor Steging, Silja Renooij and Bart Verheij

Session 5: Data quality, narratives, and safety issues

  • Potential Risks of Using Justice Tech within the Colombian Judicial System in a Rural Landscape, Maria Gamboa
  • Decoding the Docket: Machine Learning Approaches to Party Name Standardization, Logan Pratico
  • Demo: CLEO’s narrative generator prototype: Using GenAI to help unrepresented litigants tell their stories, Erik Bornmann
  • Analyzing Images of Legal Documents: Toward Multi-Modal LLMs for Access to Justice: Hannes Westermann and Jaromir Savelka

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