The Fourth Annual Legal Scholars Roundtable on Artificial Intelligence 2025 will be held next week at Emory Law and I am very excited by the amazing line-up of speakers and commentators we have.

AI Roundtable Papers
Neel Guha, Information in AI Regulation
Michael Goodyear, Dignity and Deepfakes
Kat Geddes, AI’s Attribution Problem
Deven Desai & Mark Riedl, Responsible AI Agents
Nikola Datzov, AI Jurisprudence: Toward Automated Justice
Yiyang Mei & Matthew Sag, The Illusion of Rights-Based AI Regulation
David Rubenstein, Federalism & Algorithms
Oren Bracha, Generative AI Two Information Goods
Some of these papers are available in draft on SSRN.com or arXiv.com, others are still in development.
AI Roundtable Keynote
We also have a special keynote from Prof. Barton Beebe, presenting his new book manuscript “Technological Change and the Beautiful Deaths of Law: A Recurring History.” The Roundtable is invitation only, Emory faculty and students who are interested in attending should contact me for details.
History of the Legal Scholars Roundtable on Artificial Intelligence
The Roundtable was founded by Professor Matthew Sag and Professor Charlotte Tschider in March 2022 as an online event (due to the Covid-19 Pandemic) and has been conducted as an annual event at Emory Law School ever since. The Roundtable is supported by Emory University School of Law and by Emory’s AI.Humanity initiative.
The following were recognized as the Roundtable’s Best Paper in their respective years: Rebecca Crootof, Margot Kaminski, & Nicholson Price, Humans in the Loop, 76 Vanderbilt Law Review 429 (2023) (Best paper of 2022); Matthew T. Wansley, Regulating Driving Automation Safety, 73 Emory Law Journal 505 (2024) (Best paper of 2023); Mark Bartholomew, A Right to Be Left Dead, 112 California Law Review 1591 (2024) (Best paper of 2024)