This Monthly Intake collects AI law scholarship posted to AI Law Blawg in June 2026, organized by category.
AI Governance
- Tom Golway, The Problems of Philosophy in the Age of AI
- Valerio De Stefano, Labour Law, Technology, and the Attack on the Rules-Based-Order
- Joshua S. Joseph, Balancing Innovation and Biomedical Ethics within National Institutes of Health: Integrative and Regulatory Reforms for Artificial Intelligence-Driven Biotechnology (44 Biotech. L. Rep. 2 (2025) [10.1089/blr.2025.360002.jj ])
- Frank Pasquale, Discerning Artificial and Authentic Intelligence: Profundity as Depth in Antiqua et Nova
- Benjamin Minhao Chen & Xinyu Xie, The Alignment Target Problem: Divergent Moral Judgments of Humans, AI Systems, and Their Designers
- Andrew W. Torrance & Bill Tomlinson, Governance of the A.I., by the A.I., and for the A.I. (93 Miss. L. J. 107)
Liability and Private Law
- Shai Stern, Algorithmic Property (North Carolina Law Review (forthcoming 2026))
- Cindy J. Cho, Artificial Intelligence, Real Homicide? (76 DePaul L. Rev. __ (forthcoming 2026).)
- Bryant Walker Smith, “Self-Driving” Means Self-Driving (Forthcoming in Drake Law Review)
- Trent Kannegieter, Nondeterministic Torts: A Mechanistic Approach to Large Language Model Tort Liability
Data Governance and Training
- Nydia Remolina, Open Finance
- Halefom H. Abraha, Navigating Workers’ Data Rights in the Digital Age: A Historical, Current, and Future Perspective on Workers’ Data Protection
- Ryan Whalen, Human-Required Originality: Copyright Eligibility in a Post-AI World (Forthcoming AIPLA Q.J. (Summer 2026))
- Andrei Marmor, AI and the Loss of Hermeneutics
- Nikhil Pradhan, Intellectual Property Strategies for AI-Enabled Drug Development (Bringing Medicines to Life: How Intellectual Property Enables Innovation in the Life Sciences (eds. Jonathan M. Barnett and Bowman Heiden, Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2026))
- Øystein Baste et al., Open Justice Data in Europe: A Patchwork
