Vindicating Rights Amid Algorithms: Constitutional Limits on Automated Decision-Making

1.5 Substantive credits

The University of Pennsylvania’s Journal of Constitutional Law hosted its Volume 27 Symposium on Data, AI, and the Constitution: Redefining Law for the Digital Age on Friday, January 31, 2025, at Penn Carey Law School. Scholars explored how constitutional criminal law doctrine must adapt to and is impacted by the advent of new technologies, discussing a wide range of topics including Fourth Amendment issues in gathering digital data, privacy rights, digital surveillance in criminal investigations, and constitutional implications of predictive policing and crime forecasting technologies.
Vindicating Rights Amid Algorithms: Constitutional Limits on Automated Decision Making
  • Ben Winters, Consumer Federation of America
  • Kiel Brennan-Marquez, University of Connecticut
  • Andrew Ferguson, American University


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Penn Carey Law
Penn Carey Law

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  Vindicating Rights Amid Algorithms: Constitutional Limits on Automated Decision-Making
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