Addressing Disconnection: Automated Decision-Making, Administrative Law and Regulatory Reform

IF 1.2 Q1 LAW
Anna Huggins
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Automation is transforming how government agencies make decisions. This article analyses three distinctive features of automated decision-making that are difficult to reconcile with key doctrines of administrative law developed for a human-centric decision-making context. First, the complex, multi-faceted decision-making requirements arising from statutory interpretation and administrative law principles raise questions about the feasibility of designing automated systems to cohere with these expectations. Secondly, whilst the courts have emphasised a human mental process as a criterion of a valid decision, many automated decisions are made with limited or no human input. Thirdly, the new types of bias associated with opaque automated decision-making are not easily accommodated by the bias rule, or other relevant grounds of judicial review. This article, therefore, argues that doctrinal and regulatory evolution are both needed to address these disconnections and maintain the accountability and contestability of administrative decisions in the digital age.
解决脱节:自动化决策、行政法和监管改革
自动化正在改变政府机构的决策方式。本文分析了自动化决策的三个显著特征,这些特征很难与为以人为中心的决策环境而发展起来的行政法的关键理论相协调。首先,法律解释和行政法原则所产生的复杂、多方面的决策要求,对设计符合这些期望的自动化系统的可行性提出了质疑。其次,虽然法院强调人类的心理过程是有效决定的标准,但许多自动决定是在有限或没有人类输入的情况下做出的。第三,与不透明的自动化决策相关的新型偏见不容易被偏见规则或其他相关的司法审查理由所容纳。因此,本文认为,为了解决这些脱节问题,并在数字时代保持行政决策的问责性和可争议性,理论和监管都需要进化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
7.70%
发文量
25
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