Technological innovations and EU law enforcement
The combined effect of digitalization, artificial intelligence, and the decreasing cost of computing is transforming the manner in which EU and national – both judicial and administrative – authorities enforce EU law. This horizontal stream explored the below-listed three developments, in view of the results of the sectoral WP where these transformations are particularly visible:
First, technological innovations are changing management and exchange of information tools used by public authorities entrusted with EU law enforcement – ranging from co-operation between judges and prosecutors, to access to data-bases and exchange of administrative information.
Secondly, since they rationalize the use of enforcement discretion while reducing transaction costs of judicial and administrative co-operation, these technological innovations may have an effect on the three strategies of EU law enforcement that lay in the core of this proposal – centralized, transnational and indirect enforcement.
Finally, big data, machine learning and other technological innovations may also influence the behaviour of general principles of EU law enforcement, such as effectiveness, democracy, rule of law, subsidiarity, cooperation, etc.