Self-Driving Cars and Some (Unintended) Regulatory Barriers in India: A Road Less Travelled?

Q3 Social Sciences
Saloni Khanderia
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract The deployment of self-driving cars seems to be the recent focus in several parts of the world. The operation of Robotaxis, shuttles and other forms of public transport in the United States [the US], China and France are illustrative of these trends. Some other parts of the world, such as Germany and Japan, have simultaneously been gearing up to open public roads to such cars. The recent trends indicate that implementation of such modern technologies is no longer a moot point. Instead, current questions have increasingly focused on how, not whether, technological developments such as these may safely be adapted into public life. The introduction of self-driving cars has not been free of complexities. Among other things, their introduction necessitates an urgent overhaul of the regulatory environment to address the unique challenges of modern technologies. On the legislative front, the formulation of clear, coherent rules to ascertain the rights and liabilities of the various stakeholders, such as users vis-à-vis owners and manufacturers, for harm caused by such vehicles has become indispensable. On several occasions, the determination of liability for harm caused by self-driving vehicles would involve an interplay between domestic accident-liability rules and conflict-of-laws rules, especially where the damage has allegedly been caused by a car that has been manufactured overseas. In the absence of a treaty or Convention, several major jurisdictions such as Germany, France, the UK and China have developed legal principles in tandem with the introduction of self-driving cars. In contrast, India has been unmoved by these global developments. As the world progresses towards a legal discourse to revamp the regulatory framework to address the challenges of self-driving cars, India has stood firm in banning their operation. On the other hand, consumer anxieties concerning the operation of such vehicles on public roads in India have consistently risen – depicting the lack of trust in the ability of the current legislative framework to safeguard the rights and interests of the potential users and injury victims. This article attempts to identify the source of consumer concerns. It critically evaluates the predicaments that adjudicators and claimants may encounter if ordinary legal principles for motor vehicle injuries are extended to self-driving cars. The article demonstrates the uncertainties in Indian law on the subject of self-driving cars. The present legislative principles merely stipulate the mechanism to ascertain the liability for fatal or grave injuries caused by motor vehicles without concurrently prescribing the consequences of forms of damage that are not fatal or grave. Consequently, the paper recognizes the need for special rules on the regulation of self-driving cars and, accordingly, examines some workable solutions that Indian lawmakers may consider adopting if the ban on self-driving cars is eventually lifted.
印度的自动驾驶汽车和一些(无意的)监管障碍:一条人迹罕至的道路?
自动驾驶汽车的部署似乎是最近世界上几个地区的焦点。在美国、中国和法国,机器人出租车、班车和其他形式的公共交通工具的运营就是这些趋势的例证。世界上其他一些地区,如德国和日本,也在同时准备向此类汽车开放公共道路。最近的趋势表明,这些现代技术的实施不再是一个悬而未决的问题。相反,目前的问题越来越集中在如何,而不是是否,这样的技术发展可以安全地适应公共生活。自动驾驶汽车的引入并非没有复杂性。除其他事项外,它们的引入需要对监管环境进行紧急改革,以应对现代技术的独特挑战。在立法方面,必须制定清晰、连贯的规则,以确定各持份者(例如使用者与-à-vis车主和制造商)对此类车辆造成的损害的权利和责任。在一些情况下,自动驾驶汽车造成的损害的责任确定将涉及国内事故责任规则和法律冲突规则之间的相互作用,特别是在据称损害是由海外制造的汽车造成的情况下。在没有条约或公约的情况下,德国、法国、英国和中国等几个主要司法管辖区在引入自动驾驶汽车的同时制定了法律原则。相比之下,印度对这些全球发展无动于衷。随着世界朝着修改监管框架以应对自动驾驶汽车挑战的法律讨论前进,印度坚定地禁止了自动驾驶汽车的运营。另一方面,消费者对此类车辆在印度公共道路上运行的担忧不断上升,这表明人们对当前立法框架保障潜在使用者和受伤受害者权益的能力缺乏信任。本文试图确定消费者关注的来源。它批判性地评估了如果将普通的机动车伤害法律原则扩展到自动驾驶汽车上,裁判员和索赔人可能会遇到的困境。这篇文章展示了印度法律在自动驾驶汽车问题上的不确定性。目前的立法原则仅仅规定了确定机动车辆造成致命或严重伤害的责任的机制,而没有同时规定非致命或严重损害形式的后果。因此,这篇论文认识到需要制定关于自动驾驶汽车监管的特殊规则,并相应地研究了一些可行的解决方案,如果自动驾驶汽车禁令最终被解除,印度立法者可能会考虑采用这些解决方案。
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
Journal of Tort Law
Journal of Tort Law Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: The Journal of Tort Law aims to be the premier publisher of original articles about tort law. JTL is committed to methodological pluralism. The only peer-reviewed academic journal in the U.S. devoted to tort law, the Journal of Tort Law publishes cutting-edge scholarship in tort theory and jurisprudence from a range of interdisciplinary perspectives: comparative, doctrinal, economic, empirical, historical, philosophical, and policy-oriented. Founded by Jules Coleman (Yale) and some of the world''s most prominent tort scholars from the Harvard, Fordham, NYU, Yale, and University of Haifa law faculties, the journal is the premier source for original articles about tort law and jurisprudence.
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