The legaltech book : the legal technology handbook for investors, entrepreneurs and fintech visionaries /: the legal technology handbook for investors, entrepreneurs and fintech visionaries. (2020)
- Record Type:
- Book
- Title:
- The legaltech book : the legal technology handbook for investors, entrepreneurs and fintech visionaries /: the legal technology handbook for investors, entrepreneurs and fintech visionaries. (2020)
- Main Title:
- The legaltech book : the legal technology handbook for investors, entrepreneurs and fintech visionaries
- Further Information:
- Note: Edited by Sophia Adams Bhatti, Akber Datoo, Drago Indjic ; edited-in-chief, Susanne Chishti.
- Editors:
- Chishti, Susanne, 1971-
Bhatti, Sophia Adams
Datoo, Akber, 1978-
Indjic, Drago - Contents:
- Preface About the Editors Acknowledgements Part 1 – An Introduction to Legal Tech: The Law boosted by AI and Technology Chapter 1: Liam Brown - We are voyagers Chapter 2: Daan Vansimpsen - Mapping and classifying legal techs Chapter 3: Struan Britland and Elly May - Educating for disruption, innovation and legal technology Chapter 4: Alessandro Galtieri - An introduction to mapping and classifying Legal Tech Chapter 5: Paul Massey - In-house Counsel can drive Industry Change through Legal Technology Chapter 6: Brie Lam - The Role of Legal Tech in Financial Services: A Case Study Chapter 7: Laura Stoskute - How Artificial Intelligence Is Transforming The Legal Profession Chapter 8: Charlotte Gerrish & Lily Morrison - Can the Law Keep Up with the Growth of AI? Chapter 9: Cemil Cakir - Fairness, accountability and transparency – trust in AI and machine learning Chapter 10: Brian Tang - The Chiron Imperative – A Framework of Six Human-in-the-Loop Paradigms to Create Wise and Just AI-Human Centaurs Chapter 11: Laura van Wyngaarden - Lawyers’ Ethical Responsibility to Leverage AI in the Practice of Law Chapter 12: Paula Hodges QC and Charlie Morgan - Dispute Resolution 2.0: The Era of BIG data, AI and Analytics Chapter 13: Ben Stoneham - Why All LegalTech Roads 'Point' to a Platform Strategy Chapter 14: Simon George - An Introduction to The Internet of Things Part 2 – Law and Data Chapter 15: Natasha McCarthy - Technology and the Law – Data and the Law Chapter 16: Thomas Hyrkiel -Preface About the Editors Acknowledgements Part 1 – An Introduction to Legal Tech: The Law boosted by AI and Technology Chapter 1: Liam Brown - We are voyagers Chapter 2: Daan Vansimpsen - Mapping and classifying legal techs Chapter 3: Struan Britland and Elly May - Educating for disruption, innovation and legal technology Chapter 4: Alessandro Galtieri - An introduction to mapping and classifying Legal Tech Chapter 5: Paul Massey - In-house Counsel can drive Industry Change through Legal Technology Chapter 6: Brie Lam - The Role of Legal Tech in Financial Services: A Case Study Chapter 7: Laura Stoskute - How Artificial Intelligence Is Transforming The Legal Profession Chapter 8: Charlotte Gerrish & Lily Morrison - Can the Law Keep Up with the Growth of AI? Chapter 9: Cemil Cakir - Fairness, accountability and transparency – trust in AI and machine learning Chapter 10: Brian Tang - The Chiron Imperative – A Framework of Six Human-in-the-Loop Paradigms to Create Wise and Just AI-Human Centaurs Chapter 11: Laura van Wyngaarden - Lawyers’ Ethical Responsibility to Leverage AI in the Practice of Law Chapter 12: Paula Hodges QC and Charlie Morgan - Dispute Resolution 2.0: The Era of BIG data, AI and Analytics Chapter 13: Ben Stoneham - Why All LegalTech Roads 'Point' to a Platform Strategy Chapter 14: Simon George - An Introduction to The Internet of Things Part 2 – Law and Data Chapter 15: Natasha McCarthy - Technology and the Law – Data and the Law Chapter 16: Thomas Hyrkiel - I Make the Rules, Why Should I Care About LegalTech? Chapter 17: Stevan Gostojić – From Legal Documents to Legal Data Chapter 18: Afsaneh Towhidi, Mehran Kamkarhaghighi, Masoud Makrehchi - Acquisitive Information Extraction Framework for Legal Domain Chapter 19: Clive Spenser – Legal Expert Systems Chapter 20: Rebecca Kelly - Tech v Law: Consent Chapter 21: Charles Lombino - New Privacy Laws Require Changed Operations on Commercial Websites Chapter 22: Asim Jusic - Dealing With Tensions Between the Blockchain and the GDPR Chapter 23: Christy Ng - Rise of the Legalbots: How in-house teams and business lines benefit Chapter 24: Leyanda Purchase - AI Is Changing Boardroom Dynamics Chapter 25: Sam De Silva - Cloud Computing Contracts Part 3 – Technology vs Law Chapter 26: Ann Brooks - Legal tech in our daily lives Chapter 27: Ivy Wong - Legal Tech for the rest Chapter 28: Mike Butler - Technology and in-house counsel Chapter 29: Ekaterina Safonova - Smart home or spy home? Chapter 30: Graham Thomson, Daryna Plysak and Irwin Mitchel - Cybersecurity myths & the hero’s journey Chapter 31: Dana Denis-Smith - Legal talent platform economy – the beginning of the end? Chapter 32: Kate Lebedeva - Can Intelligence Be Appropriated: Ownership over AI Chapter 33: Israel Cedillo Lazcano - The Electronic Creation Right (ECR) Part 4 - Cryptocurrencies, Distributed Ledger Technology and the Law Chapter 34: Nita Sanger - Distributed Ledger Technology and the Legal Profession Chapter 35: Anna Elmirzayeva - Cryptoasset Regulation: Clarification and Guidance Chapter 36: Eleftherios Jerry Floros - The Legal Implications of Digital Security Offerings Chapter 37: Enrique Agudo Fernandez - Crypto-Assets and Market Abuse Chapter 38: Marc Van de Looverbosch and Pierre Berger - Crypto-Securities: Traditional Financial Instruments on a Distributed Ledger Chapter 39: Emanuele Pedilarco, Lawyer, Grimaldi Studio Legale - The Use of Digital Tokens for the Boost of Supply Chain Finance Part 5 – Smart Contracts and Applications Chapter 40: Robert Peat - LegalTech’s impact in the role and job of a lawyer Chapter 41: Martin Davidson, Lachlan Harrison-Smith and Emanuela Denaro - SMART(ER) Contracts – Digitising contracts for a new age Chapter 42: Zeljka Motikaf - Smart Contract and Traditional Contract Chapter 43: Anne Rose - Getting Smart: Blockchain and Smart Contracts Chapter 44: Luigi Telesca - Legal Prose to Code: Restructuring Contract Templates for Blockchain Automation Chapter 45: Christian Spindler - The legal framework of Pay-Per-Use financing Part 6 – Legal Technology: Increasing or Impeding Access to Justice? Chapter 46: John Finnemore - Legal Technology: Increasing or Impeding Access to Justice? Chapter 47: The Law Society of England & Wales - Legal Technology: Increasing or Impeding Access to Justice? Chapter 48: Laurence Lieberman - Digitising Disputes Chapter 49: Qiyin Chuah - Humanise with Lawtech Lawyering Chapter 50: Imranali Panjwani - From Fair Hearing to Fairtech Hearing: Improving Access to Justice in the UK Asylum and Immigration Process Chapter 51: Sebastian Ko - The Dark Side of Technology in Law: Avoiding the Pitfalls Chapter 52: Tresca Rodrigues - Closing the Justice Gap – Technology is NOT the First Step Chapter 53: Mikolaj Barczentewicz - Combining AI and digitization of judgments for access to justice Part 7 – LegalTech Around the World Chapter 54: Ron Cai, Xuzhou Chen and Sherry Zhang - Legal Implications of Artificial Intelligence in China Chapter 55: Matthias Qian, Dr Adam Saunders and Maximilian Ahrens - Mapping LegalTech Adoption and Skill Demand Chapter 56: Clare Weaver - A Case Study of Adoption of Legal Technology in a non-Western market Chapter 57: Huey Ching Beh - Why Now Is The Time For Legal Tech To Boom? Part 8 – The Future of Legal Tech Chapter 58: Mitchell E. Kowalski - Legal Tech's Legacy? Chapter 59: Benjamin Silverton - Back to the Future: How LegalTech is changing the law firm Chapter 60: Magnus Lindberg - How much disruption can we handle? Chapter 61: Patricia Pinheiro - The role of RegTech in delivering better Regulatory Compliance Chapter 62: Tara Chittenden - Patterns of speech: A future of AI-authored legal reasoning and arguments? Chapter 63: Greg Miot - From Innovation Frenzy to Productivity Steadiness Chapter 64: Richard Mabey - The humans strike back: the fall of the robots in legal tech's future List of Contributors Index … (more)
- Edition:
- 1st
- Publisher Details:
- Hoboken, New Jersey : John Wiley & Sons, Inc
- Publication Date:
- 2020
- Extent:
- 1 online resource
- Subjects:
- 340.0285
Law offices -- Technological innovations
Law offices -- Finance
Law offices - Languages:
- English
- ISBNs:
- 9781119574354
9781119574286 - Related ISBNs:
- 9781119574279
- Notes:
- Note: Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.
- Access Rights:
- Legal Deposit; Only available on premises controlled by the deposit library and to one user at any one time; The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK).
- Access Usage:
- Restricted: Printing from this resource is governed by The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK) and UK copyright law currently in force.
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library HMNTS - ELD.DS.505310
- Ingest File:
- 03_079.xml