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AI and Legal Informatics

Last updated: March 26, 2026

Stepped Reckoner (Leibniz, 1673)

Background

I came to law school after spending several years doing data analysis and modeling in the physical sciences and finance. In contrast to those fields, legal practice seemed old-fashioned. How could I automate a process? How could I make sense of everything I was reading? Are we still in the nineteenth century or what? For all of its zeal to tackle new problems, law remained in many ways stuck in the past when it came to actually doing the work. It was frustrating, and I even wrote a Note about it as a kind of protest.

We’re now in a different era, and the current crop of transformer-based language models promises to make lots of ideas that were enticingly out of reach a decade or two ago much closer. How can we take advantage of the new AI tools?

Caveat lector: this list is clearly a bit scattered and idiosyncratic. Among other things, it doesn’t include any individual papers. May it improve over time!

AI, general background

Periodicals, conferences, and collections

Organizations and projects

Books on reasoning

Books on computational law, generally

Books on ethics & society

Useful tools for hacking LLMs

Data

Online courses

Guides

AI for legal epidemiology