The Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies is a faculty-edited interdisciplinary journal focusing on the intersections of global and domestic legal regimes, markets, politics, technologies, and cultures.
NOTE: Articles written by Indiana University faculty and students are embargoed on this site for one year, all other articles are embargoed for three years. Non-embargoed issues may be available to subscribers of Project MUSE at the Project MUSE website.
Current Issue: Volume 30, Issue 1 (2023)
Symposium
Introduction: The Risk of Digitalization: Transforming Government into a Digital Leviathan
Jose Vida Fernandez
Trust in Artificial Intelligence: Analysis of the European Commission Proposal for a Regulation of Artificial Intelligence
Antonio Estella
Artificial Intelligence in Government: Risks and Challenges of Algorithmic Governance in the Administrative State
Jose Vida Fernandez
The Contentious Issues of Governance by Algorithms
Gilles J. Gugielmi
Government by Algorithms at the Light of Freedom of Information Regimes: A Case-by-Case Approach on ADM Systems within Public Education Sector
María Estrella Gutierrez
On Facial Recognition, Regulation, and "Data Necropolitics"
Antonio Pele and Caitlin Mulholland
The Digital Transformation of Tax Systems Progress, Pitfalls, and Protection in a Danish Context
Louise Blichfeldt Fjord and Peter K. Schmidt
Articles
The Curtailment of Constitutional Rights and Mechanisms of Social Control in The People's Republic of China: Hubei Province Case at the Onset of the Covid-19 Pandemic
Fabio Ratto Trabucco