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25 Vand. J. Ent. & Tech. L. 1 (2023)
The Death of the Legal Subject

handle is hein.journals/vanep25 and id is 11 raw text is: 







The Death of the Legal Subject


                          Katrina  Geddes*

                             ABSTRACT

       The law is often engaged in prediction. In the calculation of tort
damages,  for example, a judge will consider what the tort victim's likely
future earnings  would  have  been,  but for their particular injury.
Similarly,  when  considering  injunctive relief, a judge will assess
whether  the plaintiff is likely to suffer irreparable harm if a preliminary
injunction is not granted. And   for the purposes of a  child custody
evaluation,  a judge  will  consider which  parent  will provide  an
environment  that is in the best interests of the child.
       Relative to other areas of law, criminal law is oversaturated with
prediction. Almost every decision node in the criminal justice system
demands   a prediction of individual behavior: does the accused present a
flight risk, or a danger to the public (pre-trial detention); is the defendant
likely to recidivate (sentencing); and will the defendant successfully
reenter society (parole)? Increasingly, these predictions are made by
algorithms,  many  of which display racial bias, and are hidden from
public  view. Existing  scholarship  has focused  on  de-biasing and
disclosing algorithmic  models,  but this Article argues that even  a
transparent  and  unbiased  algorithm  may  undermine   the epistemic
legitimacy of a judicial decision.
       Law  has  historically generated truth claims through discursive
 and dialogic practices, using shared linguistic tools, in an environment
 characterized by proximity and reciprocity. In contrast, the truth claims
 of data science are generated from data processing of such scale and
 complexity that it is not commensurable with, or reversible to, human
 reasoning. Data science excludes the individual from the production of
 knowledge about  themselves on the basis that unmediated behavioral
 data (not self-reported or otherwise subject to conscious manipulation by
 the data subject) offers unrivaled predictive accuracy. Accordingly, data


         JSD Candidate, NYU Law. Thanks to Kathy Strandburg, Mireille Hildebrandt, Terry
 Fisher, Lewis Kornhauser, Ira Rubinstein, James Wilson, Alma Diamond, Tomer Kenneth, the ILI
 fellows, my JSD peers, and attendees at the 2022 Privacy Law Scholars Conference for their
 thoughtful feedback on earlier drafts of this Article.
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