
"Artificial intelligence is no longer an abstract or experimental technology for lawyers - it is rapidly becoming core infrastructure for law practice, courts, legal education and access-to-justice efforts, and the legal profession must now shift its focus from whether to use AI to how to govern, supervise and integrate it responsibly. That is the central conclusion of a report released yesterday from the American"
"The report, Addressing the Legal Challenges of AI: Year 2 Report on the Impact of AI on the Practice of Law, arrives at what the Task Force calls a "pivotal moment" for the profession. AI adoption has accelerated dramatically over the past year, pushing lawyers, judges, regulators and educators into unfamiliar terrain that demands new ethical frameworks, governance models and competencies."
Artificial intelligence is rapidly becoming core infrastructure across law practice, courts, legal education, and access-to-justice efforts. Adoption accelerated dramatically within a year, requiring lawyers, judges, regulators, and educators to confront unfamiliar ethical, governance, and competency challenges. The legal profession must shift focus from whether to use AI to how to govern, supervise, and integrate it responsibly. Key implications include effects on the rule of law, law practice, the courts, access to justice, legal education, governance, risk management, and ethics. The ABA Task Force's Year 2 assessment catalogs risks, opportunities, unresolved challenges, and points to the ABA Center for Innovation for follow-through.
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