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47 Fla. St. U. L. Rev. 749 (2019-2020)
A Framework for the Efficient and Ethical Use of Artificial Intelligence in the Criminal Justice System

handle is hein.journals/flsulr47 and id is 789 raw text is: 






         A FRAMEWORK FOR THE EFFICIENT AND
       ETHICAL USE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
            IN THE   CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM

                DAN  HUNTER,  MIRKO  BAGARIC, AND
                          NIGEL STOBBS*
   Machine  learning techniques are transforming the manner in which
much  of the legal system works, and criminal justice is the area which
will be most fundamentally  changed. Given  the fundamental rights
and  interests at stake in the criminal justice system, this is also the
field where the unthinking application of artificial intelligence (AI) is
most  troubling, and where there is the greatest threat to individual
rights and the likelihood of unanticipated damage to the rule of law.
These  problems  will  occur (and  are  occurring) throughout  the
criminal justice system: from data-driven predictive policing systems
in the criminal investigation process, through to recidivism prediction
for parole  applications and  sentencing  recommendation   systems
post-trial. The risks presented by Al to the proper functioning of the
criminal justice system will be exacerbated by commercial pressures
on law enforcement and the criminal justice system, partisan political
interests, and a lack of technological understanding by the judiciary
and   the legal profession  more  generally. Notwithstanding  this
dystopian  vision, there is an opportunity to use AI techniques to
improve  the detection of crime, prosecute  and  sentence criminal
offenders, help uncover discrimination, ensure parity of treatment
across the system, and  identify unfair and unjust  treatment. The
thoughtful and  appropriate use of ethical Al systems can greatly
assist in the administration of justice and the rule of law. In this
Article, we propose a  framework  for systematically implementing
Al into the criminal justice system in order to ensure that the system
operates in a normatively enhanced and  more  effective and efficient
manner.  In proposing  this framework  we grapple with  the reality
that humans  have an intrinsic emotional dislike of computers making
decisions that have an important impact on peoples' lives.

    I. INTRODUCTION   ..................................................................... 750
    II. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND CRIMINAL  LAW .................. 755
       A.  Defining Artificial Intelligence ..................................... 755
       B.  Algorithmic Aversion .................................................... 759
  III. DETECTION  OF CRIME  .......................................................... 762
       A.  Use of Al in Deterring and Detecting Crime ................ 762


    *  Professor Dan Hunter, Executive Dean, Faculty of Law, Queensland University of
Technology, Australia; Professor Mirko Bagaric, Director, Evidence-Based Sentencing and
Criminal Justice Project, Swinburne Law School, Australia; Dr. Nigel Stobbs, Senior Lec-
turer, QUT Law School, Australia.

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