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Law in the Age of AI

Law Jurist by Law Jurist
23 September 2025
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Read Time:7 Minute, 54 Second

Author(s) Saksham Srivastava, Atharv Raj Chauhan, Aakansha Agarwal student of LLB at , Institute of Legal Studies, Shri Ramswaroop Memorial University.

Abstract: 

The legal occupation is being interrupted by the development of AI which is redefining past  methods to the research, drafting, compliance, and dispute resolution. The AI-enabled  solutions can benefit lawyers, students and interns to perform faster case search, review  contracts more correctly, forecast court case results, and assist in the broader access to justice  via chatbots and online forums. While such innovations enhance accuracy, efficiency and  access, come with main implications, such as, bias, accountability, data privacy and ethical  use of automated systems to report sensitive cases in law. The pressure to guarantee  innovation on the one hand and compliance with the principle of being fair, transparent, and  under human control. On the other, can be seen in the global regulatory environment with the  AI Act in the European Union and the evolving data protection policies in India. This paper  critically examines the opportunity and risk involved in integrating AI into law, with  particular weight on how it affects the lives of students, interns, and practitioners and,  proposes a strong argumentative case on why robust legal frameworks should be well-known to meet the goals of ensuring that no technology will threaten to replace a human judgment  role in law. 

Introduction: 

The Artificial Intelligence (AI) which once traced back to its ancient/old ideas of how  machines can work independently, now contains advanced solutions that have the potential to  complete tasks in short time with greater efficiency and more than the capabilities of a human  being. Generative AI, for example ChatGPT, DALL·E, multimodal AI, and Midjourney,  which handles text, images, audio, and video collectively, start to change many industries  including the legal profession beginning in 2022. In the legal world, AI is becoming more of  a regular usage in legal research, contract, analysis, case briefings, agreement monitoring,  and document drafting enhancing productivity intensely and accessibility to justice. Even such high-speed incorporation has come at a cost especially with regards to privacy,  intellectual rights, bias in algorithms, responsibility, and acceptability of evidence produced 

by AI. The legal scene on a global and national level, including the EU AI Act, GDPR, and  Indian IT legislation, is emerging by trying to correct the balance between innovation and  values of transparency, fairness, and human control in present day law practice. 

In What Ways is AI Transforming the Legal Field? 

  • Legal Research & Case Analysis: AI-powered platforms quickly scan huge legal  databases, judgements, and models, delivering relevant results in seconds compared to  outdated or old manual research. 
  • Contract Review & Drafting: Tools like Law Geex and Kira Systems analyze contracts  for errors, risks, and compliance issues, and support in drafting divisions based on legal  values.  
  • Risk Monitoring: AI systems constant track regulatory changes and alert law firms or  businesses about potential agreement breaches of law in real-time. 
  • Access to Justice: Chatbots and virtual assistants provide some basic legal data by  informing people of rights and procedures they can follow, mainly in under-served  regions. 
  • Courtroom Assistance: Some jurisdictions are testing with AI tools to support benches  in legal research and decision-making tasks. 

Positive Impacts of AI on Law: 

  • Faster Legal Research – AI-powered platforms for instance Westlaw Edge and Lexis+  use natural language processing to speedily analyze statutes, case law, and legal  commentary, radically reducing research time though improving precision. 
  • Efficient Contract Review – Tools like Kira Systems and LawGeex can review  thousands of contracts in minutes, fading inconsistencies, hazards, and missing clauses,  which saves too much hours and minimizes human fault. 
  • Predictive Analytics for Litigation – AI systems can forecast case results and calculate litigation risks by examining historical data, enabling lawyers to make more up-to-date decisions. 
  • Improved Compliance Monitoring – AI tools monitor controlling updates and alert  legal teams in real time, guaranteeing that businesses remain obedient with evolving laws.
  • Expanding Access to Justice – AI chatbots provide individuals with basic legal advice,  helping those incapable to afford a lawyer. 

Use of AI by Law Students and Interns: 

Positive Aspects:- 

  • Faster Legal Research – AI tools like ChatGPT help students and interns intstantly find  relevant case law, statutes, and patterns. 
  • Drafting Assistance – AI supports writing legal papers, petitions, and contracts,  improving drafting excellence and reducing time. 
  • Summarization of Cases – Tools can generate brief summaries of lengthy judgments,  making multifaceted material easier to understand. 
  • Skill Development – By using AI repeatedly for work, students can focus extra on  analysis, argument-building, and critical legal reasoning. 
  • Access to Resources – Access to legal databases and knowledge for students who may  not have access to paid tools. 

Negative Aspects:- 

  • Over-Reliance – Excessive dependence on AI may hamper the development of critical  thinking and self-determining research skills. 
  • Accuracy Issues – AI so often produces incorrect or outdated legal information, leading  to misinformation. 
  • Moral Concerns – Using AI for assignments or research without proper credit,raises  plagiarism and academic honesty issues. 
  • Bias in Outputs – AI may repeat partialities present in the training data, which can  misinform students in sensitive legal topics. 
  • Privacy Risks – Uploading private case files or internship credentials to public AI  platforms may breach data confidentiality.

Regulatory & Legal Framework: 

The development of Artificial Intelligence has necessitated policy makers all over the globe  to come up with regulatory framework in a offer to ensure an interchange between innovation  and accountability, transparency and fairness. Worldwide, there is the first risk-based  regulation of AI at the European Union level with the AI Act (2024), that recommends to  divide the application areas into those that are non-acceptable, high-risk, limited-risk, and  minimal-risk (Veale & Borgesius, 2021). High-risk systems that are common in law  enforcement, judiciary and critical setups bear serious requirements on their application  through the Act. In the same line of thought, the OECD Artificial Intelligence (AI) Principles  (2019) focus on responsible AI, which offers transparency, representation by humans, and  protection of human rights. 

While the United States has no federal AI legislation at the present time, one can note the  existence of sectoral regulations and managerial orders (including the AI Bill of Rights  Blueprint, 2022) that regulate the deployment of AI, focusing on privacy, fairness, and  accountability. 

India is still in early days of regulating AI. The IT Act, 2000 (IT, amended in 2008) offers a  degree of structure of data protection and cyber law but it does not directly refer to AI.  However, the Digital India Act (2023 draft) and Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023  (DPDP Act), are the crucial steps to achieving privacy, security, and accountability of data  with the help of AI applications. Furthermore, there are emerging arguments around whether  AI can be applied ethically within law litigation, as well as how to handle the unfairness potential of AI, due process and legal tolerability of evidence by AI. 

As a whole, the international and domestic regulatory scene shows an identifiable pattern, the  effort to hold the potentials of AI in the legal field and governance, and reduce risks  involving privacy, bias, discrimination, and accountability. As an attorney, it is critical to  become familiar with these frameworks in the meantime AI is becoming incorporated into  courts, law firms, and academic studies.

Recommendation: 

➢ Develop a complete AI law in India similar to the EU AI Act, focusing on accountability,  transparency, and risk management. 

➢ Strengthen data protection through strict enforcement of the Digital Personal Data  Protection Act, 2023, guaranteeing confidentiality in AI use within the legal field. ➢ Promote access to justice by arranging AI chatbots and legal aid platforms to assist  marginalized groups in understanding rights and filing papers. 

➢ Encourage collaboration among government, academic world, and technology companies  to create safe, innovative AI tools for the legal sector. 

➢ Guarantee periodic review and updating of AI regulations to keep step with evolving  technologies. 

➢ Support responsible invention by providing incentives to legal tech start-ups though enforcing proper and legal safeguards. 

Conclusion: 

The introduction of Artificial Intelligence into law is a revolution in the process of legal  studies, practice and application. In terms of exta effective legal research, legal drafting, legal  prediction, and access to justice, legal compliance of legal services, the AI is unique in its  potential to increase both efficiency and decrease expenses. Temporarily, it poses urgent  questions of privacy, responsibility bias, and ethics of the deployment of automated systems  on cases that touch on slight aspects of law. International legal regimes- as seen in the EU AI  Act, U.S. AI Bill of Rights and India, the changing data protection scheme reveal a united attempt to strike a balance between revolution and protection. To law students, interns and  practitioners, the dawn of AI is an opportunity as well as a challenge: the chance to utilise  technology to smooth a more just and transparent process of delivering justice and the chance to preserve human sense, fairness and critical thinking. At the end, the future of law in the  new era of AI promises to be defined by the societies can make laws as well as impose moral practices and cultures and adopt answerable innovation, making sure that technology is at the  service of justice, not a substitute to it.

Reference: 

  1. https://artificialintelligenceact.eu/ 
  2. https://houstonlawreview.org/article/137782-navigating-the-power-of-artificial intelligence-in-the-legal-field 
  3. https://legal.thomsonreuters.com/blog/how-ai-is-transforming-the-legal-profession/ 4. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4997519 5. https://arxiv.org/abs/2107.03721

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