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30 Crim. L.F. 1 (2019)

handle is hein.journals/crimlfm30 and id is 1 raw text is: Criminal Law Forum (2019) 30:1-31                    c Springer Nature B.V. 2018
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10609-018-9360-0
MONIKA SIMMLER*          and NORA MARKWALDER**                  CrossMark
GUILTY ROBOTS? RETHINKING THE NATURE
OF CULPABILITY AND LEGAL PERSONHOOD IN AN AGE
OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
ABSTRACT. Robots and Artificial Intelligence are conquering our world. Just as
any progress, this development is expected to have a relevant impact on law in
general as well as on criminal law in particular. It involves the potential of trans-
forming our conception of criminal responsibility, as notions of personhood,
capacity and culpability will not stay unaffected. This article aims at giving an
overview of the potential conversion criminal law is facing due to the increased
importance of robotics and of artificial intelligence in our everyday lives. The dis-
cussion starts with an overview of different scenarios of criminal liability in the
context of robotics. While some of them can be faced with existing doctrines, others
demand a more far reaching assessment of the question if robots could ever gain legal
personhood and therefore be originally called to account. While the picture of robots
as liable perpetrators seems implausible at first sight, the present analysis reveals that
blameworthiness is inherently socially constructed. However, it is not randomly
constituted and follows social interaction and social meaning in fulfilling a certain
function. Enabling the possibility of robots' criminal liability therefore would require
that robots are regarded as a suitable agent of responsibility. The article lights up the
conditions for such social and legal change in rethinking the very nature of culpa-
bility having the overall function of criminal law in mind. It can be concluded that
the on-going technological progress definitely has the potential of testing the theory
of criminal responsibility while more clearly unveiling its foundations and its soci-
ological implications. A guilty robot, however, as fictional as that appears today,
may be nothing unrealistic nor unlikely in the future.
* Monika Simmler, PhD, Postdoctoral Fellow of Criminal Law, Law of Criminal
Procedure and Criminology at the University of St. Gallen, Tigerbergstrasse 21, 9000
St. Gallen, Switzerland. E-mail: monika.simmler@unisg.ch.
** Nora Markwalder, Assistant Professor of Criminal Law, Law of Criminal
Procedure and Criminology at the University of St. Gallen, Bodanstrasse 4, 9000 St.
Gallen, Switzerland. E-mail: nora.markwalder@unisg.ch.

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