Academic journals around the world have been forced to respond to the opportunities and challenges that come with the rise of AI tools. But there is not yet any clear consensus on how to create and adopt policies to effectively govern the use of generative AI or AI-assisted technologies.
A new book, edited by Common Law’s Professor Yan Campagnolo, delves into these issues with a specific focus on the world of legal journals. Artificial Intelligence’s Impact on Legal Journals: Challenges and Opportunities for the Ottawa Law Review (Incidence de l’intelligence artificielle sur les revues de droit : Défis et possibilités pour la Revue de droit d’Ottawa) offers several recommendations designed to help legal journals like the Ottawa Law Review – uOttawa’s open access, peer-reviewed, student-run academic legal journal – responsibly harness the transformative power of AI while upholding its dedication to privacy, intellectual property, and scholarly rigor.
An event to launch the book will take place at Fauteux Hall on March 27 at 5:00 p.m. The event will feature a conversation about the specific opportunities and challenges that AI presents to researchers in law. Participants include Professor Campagnolo, Professor Marina Pavlović, and Common Law graduates Leonie van Haeren and Shaarini Ravitharan, who both contributed to writing the new book.
Learn more about this book launch.
Learn more about the new book Artificial Intelligence’s Impact on Legal Journals.