The Rule of Law “By Design”?

Article by Monika Zalnieriute, Lyria Bennett Moses, and George Williams

Can technology be deployed to promote, or even guarantee, the rule of law? Can the rule of law be designed into technological systems? The idea of achieving legal objectives through technology “by design” is not new. However, it has been vividly revived in debates around systems such as blockchain, which has been proclaimed as the “killer app for corruption.”1 Other technologies have been used to “modernize” elections, with claims of improved transparency and reduced human error and fraud. Panoptic governance mechanisms such as China's Social Credit System promise perfectly predictable, consistent, and equal enforcement of the law. Technology thus is increasingly presented as a tool for fostering rule of law values--a rule of law “by design.” In this Article, we ask whether technological solutions that embed rule of law values do in fact promote the rule of law. Using case studies and analyzing current developments, we explore the extent to which the promise of technologies as a means of delivering on the rule of law hold up in practice and what they mean for the idea of a society ruled by law.


About the Authors

Monika Zalnieriute, Senior Lecturer and Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Award Fellow at Faculty of Law and Justice, UNSW Sydney; Lead of “AI and Law” research stream at Allens Hub for Technology, Law and Innovation, UNSW Sydney; Associate Investigator at Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence “Automated Decision-Making and Society.”

Lyria Bennett Moses, Director, Allens Hub for Technology, Law and Innovation; Professor, Faculty of Law and Justice, UNSW Sydney.

George Williams, Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Planning and Assurance; Anthony Mason Professor and Scientia Professor, UNSW Sydney.

Citation

95 Tul. L. Rev. 1063 (2021)