WP Series No. 05-23 AI technologies and right to human judge in public regulation – Piconese |
WP Series No. 06-23 Establishing principles for the use of artificial intelligence against crypto laundering in European bank law – Antunes |
WP Series No. 07-23 Whose Bias Is It, Anyway? The Need for a Four-Eyes Principle in AIDriven Competition Law Proceedings – De Cooman |
WP Series No. 08-23 The European way to AI in EU Research & Innovation projects- Delinavelli |
WP Series No. 09-23 Transparency in the Face of New Technologies: Information Rights under the Law Enforcement Directive- Erdogan |
WP Series No. 10-23 Ready or not? A systematic review of case studies using data-driven approaches to detect real-world antitrust violations – Amthauer, Fleiß, Guggi and Robertson |
WP Series No. 11-23 Will AI ‘subtly’ take over decision-making in the EU migration context?Warnings and lessons from ETIAS and VIS- Gugliotta & Elbi |
WP Series No. 12-23 Slipping through the cracks: The carve-outs for AI tax enforcement systems in the EU AI Act – Hadwick |
WP Series No. 13-23 Digitalization in Dutch and EU Migration Law Individual Rights in the Blind Spot- Hillary & Aarrass |
WP Series No. 14-23 Developing AI tools for law enforcement authorities (LEAs): The journey of the TRACE project – Turksen & Kafteranis |
WP Series No. 15-23 Opening the black box: uncovering the European Commission’s cartel fining formula through computational analysis- Van den Bosch & Bostoen |
WP Series No. 16-23 The right to avoid self-incrimination: yet another elephant in the automated competition law enforcement room?- Van Cleynenbreugel |
WP Series No. 20-23 AI and law enforcement – Jiménez |