About this item
Highlights
- Emerging technologies like artificial intelligence and quantum computing will transform all sectors of the economy, including the legal profession.
- About the Author: Raymond H. Brescia is Associate Dean for Research and Intellectual Life and Hon. Harold R. Tyler Chair in Law and Technology at Albany Law School.
- 192 Pages
- Freedom + Security / Law Enforcement, Legal Profession
Description
Book Synopsis
Emerging technologies like artificial intelligence and quantum computing will transform all sectors of the economy, including the legal profession. But technology has dramatically impacted lawyers before. In this book, author Ray Brescia shows how the new technologies of the late 19th century spurred the emergence of a new "version" of the profession, but one that was largely inaccessible to too many consumers.
Today, new technologies are creating an even newer version of the profession--Lawyer 3.0--that could be more affordable and effective than the one that currently exists. This work not only describes this phenomenon but shows how lawyers cannot just survive but thrive in this new reality.
Review Quotes
'A clear vision of where the legal profession is headed in this era of massive economic and technological disruption, and a road map for lawyers, clients, and educators trying to manage the journey. When it comes to lawyers and what they do and clients and what they need, it is a timely and much-needed synthesis of the specific and the systematic.' Michael Madison, University of Pittsburgh School of Law
'Brescia's latest work reinforces his reputation as a shrewd, well-informed, and insightful analyst of the most relevant modern trends in the legal profession.' Daniel B. Rodriguez, Northwestern Pritzker School of Law
'A must-read. An astute explanation of how technology is quickly transforming law--not just for lawyers, but for the millions of people lawyers are currently failing to serve.' James Sandman, University of Pennsylvania
About the Author
Raymond H. Brescia is Associate Dean for Research and Intellectual Life and Hon. Harold R. Tyler Chair in Law and Technology at Albany Law School.