AI in our Justice System 

This report proposes the first rights-based framework to guide AI use across the UK justice system, to help us harness AI’s power while guarding against its risks. 
Click here to read the full report 

The justice system plays a vital role in peoples’ lives and our democracy – it determines who cares for children, how crimes are punished, how financial and workplace disputes are solved, and much more. Yet it is beset by crises: court delays run to years, many people with legal problems cannot access necessary legal advice, and prisons are overcrowded.  

The Government intends to use AI to ‘revolutionise’ public services, and AI is already shaping the justice system through police surveillance, legal research, and advice bots, for example.  

Yet AI is not a cure-all, and it carries big risks. Cases like the Post Office Horizon scandal and the Dutch child benefits scandal (where thousands were falsely accused of fraud due to a discriminatory algorithm) show the serious harms technology can enable. The UK justice system also has more data gaps than any other public service, creating extra challenges for responsible AI use.  

A powerful rights-based framework to guide AI use:  

While most other approaches to AI focus on ethics, this report sets out a rights-based approach to draw on concrete, well-understood, and enforceable legal rights. It proposes two clear requirements on those looking to use AI in the justice system:  

  1. Goal led: Ensure the tool is clearly aimed at improving one or more of justice system’s core goals of access to justice, fair and lawful decision making, and transparency.  
  1. Duty to act responsibly: Ensure all those involved in creating and using the tool take responsibility for ensuring the rule of law and human rights are embedded at each stage of its design, development, and deployment. 

Drawing on international examples and in-depth research, the report argues that this framework can help safely harness AI’s potential across the justice sector. The framework is also readily transferable to other public services. 


Read the full report, AI in our Justice System, here.  
Learn more about our multiyear programme on AI, human rights and the law here.