The Stanford Legal Design Lab is so happy to be a sponsoring co-host of the third consecutive AI and Access to Justice workshop at the JURIX conference. This round, the conference is at Turin, Italy in December 2025. The theme is AI, Dispute Resolution, and Access to Justice.
See the main workshop website here.

The workshop will involve the collaboration of the Suffolk LIT Lab, the Stanford Legal Design Lab, the Maastricht Law and Tech Lab, Libra.law, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Swansea University, and the University of Turin, and will be part of the larger Jurix 2025 conference hosted this year in Italy.
The workshop will focus on three topics:
- Data issues related to access to justice (building reusable, sharable datasets for research)
- AI for access to justice generally
- AI for dispute resolution
The provisional schedule is as follows:
Session 1 – Interfaces and Knowledge Tools
LegalWebAgent: Empowering Access to Justice via LLM-Based Web Agents
CourtPressGER: A German Court Decision to Press Release Summarization Dataset
A Voice-First AI Service for People-Centred Justice in Niger
Designing Clarity with AI: Improving the Usability of Case Law Databases of International Courts
CaseConnect: Cross-Lingual Legal Case Retrieval with Semantic Embeddings and Structure-Aware Segmentation
Glitter: Visualizing Lexical Surprisal for Readability in Administrative Texts
Session 2 – Global AI for Legal Help, Prediction and Dispute Resolution
Understanding Rights Through AI: The Role of Legal Chatbots in Access to Justice
The Private Family Forecast: A Predictive Method for an Effective and Informed Access to Justice
Artificial Intelligence Enabled Justice Tools for Refugees in Tanzania
Artificial Intelligence and Access to Justice in Chile
AI and Judicial Transformation: Comparative Analysis of Predictive Tools in EU Labour Law
From Textual Simplification to Epistemic Justice: Rethinking Digital Dispute Resolution Through AI
Session 3 – Workflows, Frameworks and Governance of Legal AI
PLDF – A Private Legal Declarative Document Generation Framework
How the ECtHR Frames Artificial Intelligence: A Distant Reading Analysis
What Legal Help Teams and Consumers Actually Do: A Legal Help Task Taxonomy
Packaging Thematic Analysis as an AI Workflow for Legal Research
Gender Bias in LLMs: Preliminary Evidence from Shared Parenting Scenario in Czech Family Law
AI-Powered Resentencing: Bridging California’s Second-Chance Gap
AI Assistance for Court Review of Default Judgments
Interactive Workshop – Global Legal Data Availability



