Artificial intelligence has moved from buzzword to infrastructure—quietly shaping decisions from credit scoring to public administration. As algorithms step into roles once reserved for human judgment, they bring legal questions that don’t fit neatly into existing frameworks.
That’s exactly where the next special issue of Arsboni comes in.
About the Arsboni Law Review
Arsboni Law Review is a periodically published electronic journal (think: a curated, thematic digital law review) that brings together sharp, accessible scholarship at the intersection of law and society. For its 2026 special issue, it teams up with the Algorithmic Constitutionalism Research Group to focus on AI and law.
Why this matters
AI is no longer peripheral—it’s embedded in governance, markets, and everyday life. That raises familiar but newly complex questions:
liability, transparency, fundamental rights, and regulation. The answers are still in flux, which makes this a rare moment not just to react to change, but to help define it.
What they’re looking for
Submissions are open to anyone exploring the legal dimensions of technological change—whether through theory, regulatory analysis, or practical insight. Interdisciplinary work is especially welcome. The goal isn’t just to produce answers, but to widen the conversation.
- Languages: English or Hungarian
- Length: approx. 1–2 author sheets
- Includes: abstract + formal requirements
- Review: double-blind peer review (two reviewers)
How to submit
Send your manuscript (with required statements) to: ai@arsboni.hu
The official call for papers, along with all relevant details, is available here.
📅 Deadline: June 15, 2026
If you have a strong claim, a good question, or even a well-framed dilemma about AI and law—this is a good place to put it to work.




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