Discretion in the Automated Administrative State

IF 0.4 Q3 LAW
Sancho McCann
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract Automated decision-making takes up an increasingly significant place in the administrative state. This article presents a conception of discretion that is helpful for evaluating the proper place of algorithms in public decision-making. I argue that the algorithm itself is not a site of discretion. The threat is that automated decision-making alters the relationships between traditional actors in a way that can cut down discretion and human commitment. Algorithmic decision-makers can serve to fetter the discretion that the legislature and the populace expect to be exercised. We must strive to maintain discretion, moral agency, deliberative ideals, and human commitment through the system that surrounds the use of an algorithm and to develop a new expertise that can retain and exercise the expected discretion. Backing this argument are traditional legal constraints, public expectations, and administrative law principles, tied together through the organizing principle of discretion.
行政自动化国家中的自由裁量权
摘要自动化决策在行政管理中占有越来越重要的地位。本文提出了自由裁量权的概念,这有助于评估算法在公共决策中的适当地位。我认为算法本身不是一个自由裁量权的网站。威胁在于,自动化决策会改变传统行为者之间的关系,从而减少自由裁量权和人类承诺。算法决策者可能会束缚立法机构和民众期望行使的自由裁量权。我们必须努力通过围绕算法使用的系统来保持自由裁量权、道德代理、审议理想和人类承诺,并开发能够保留和行使预期自由裁量的新专业知识。支持这一论点的是传统的法律约束、公众期望和行政法原则,它们通过自由裁量权的组织原则联系在一起。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
16.70%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: The Canadian Journal of Law & Jurisprudence serves as a forum for special and general jurisprudence and legal philosophy. It publishes articles that address the nature of law, that engage in philosophical analysis or criticism of legal doctrine, that examine the form and nature of legal or judicial reasoning, that investigate issues concerning the ethical aspects of legal practice, and that study (from a philosophical perspective) concrete legal issues facing contemporary society. The journal does not use case notes, nor does it publish articles focussing on issues particular to the laws of a single nation. The Canadian Journal of Law & Jurisprudence is published on behalf of the Faculty of Law, Western University.
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