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- 26–28 July 2023
- Organizers: Future Law Lab of the Jagiellonian University in Kraków & the RECOGNISE Partnership
- Venue: Faculty of Law and Administration of the Jagiellonian University (12 Bracka Street, Kraków, the map), Auditorium Hall
Day #1 (Wednesday, 26 July)
10:00–10:30 Welcome & introductions
10:30–11:30 Session #1
Chair: Aleš Novak (University of Ljubljana)
Piotr Bystranowski (Jagiellonian University) Normative Ignorance and the Folk Concept of Law
Vilius Dranseika (Jagiellonian University) Personal Identity and Legal Expertise: An Empirical Study
11:30–12:00 Coffee break
12:00–13:30 Session #2
Chair: Miha Hafner (University of Ljubljana)
Louise Victoria Johansen (University of Copenhagen) The Role of Emotions in Danish Courtrooms
Giuseppe Rocchè (University of Palermo) & Michele Ubertone (Maastricht University) Moral Contamination and Legal Reasoning
Mehmet Sadik Bektas (University of Opole) The Moral Foreign Language Effect: Do Languages Influence How We Make Moral Decisions?
13:30–15:00 Lunch break
15:00–16:00 Session #3
Chair: Michele Ubertone (Maastricht University)
Piotr Litwin (Jagiellonian University) Responsibility for Bad Beliefs
Wojciech Graboń (University of Warsaw) Interpretation and Deidealization: Insights From Legal Theory and the Methodology of Science
16:00–16:30 Coffee break
16:30–17:30 Session #4
Chair: Giuseppe Rocchè (University of Palermo)
Rafael Buzón (University of Alicante) Reductionism and Legal Reasoning
Corrado Roversi (University of Bologna) On Legal Facts and Their Cognitive Preconditions
Day #2 (Thursday, 27 July)
[no Session #1]
11:30–12:00 Coffee break
12:00–13:30 Session #2
Chair: Rafael Buzón (University of Alicante)
Artur Bogucki (Centre for European Policy Studies) Trustworthy Hybrid Decision Making Systems: Ethical, Legal, and Socioeconomic Factors Analysis
Paolo Capriati (University of Palermo) Machines and Democracy: Justifications and Role of AI in Legislative Production
Bojan Spaić (University of Belgrade) & Miodrag Jovanović (University of Belgrade) Artificial Reason and Artificial Intelligence: The Legal Reasoning Capabilities of GPT Models
13:30–15:00 Lunch break
15:00–16:00 Session #3
Chair: Bojan Spaić (University of Belgrade)
Tomasz Braun (Lazarski University) AI Reasoning and Attribution of Accountability: A Scary Game of Hide and Seek
Mikołaj Ryśkiewicz (University of Warsaw) How NLP Deepens Our Understanding of the Linguistic Picture of the Legal World
16:00–16:30 Coffee break
16:30–17:30 Poster session
Chair: Corrado Roversi (University of Bologna)
Julia Castro (University of Alicante) Do Neuroscientific Advances Invalidate Theories of Criminal Action?
Adam Demczuk (Jagiellonian University) Issues With Bias-Motivated Crimes: Can a Perpetrator Have No Prejudices?
Niccolò Faccini (Luiss Guido Carli) The Secret Ethical Life of Criminal Law: The Legal Use of Emotions and Restorative Justice
Miha Hafner (University of Ljubljana) Emotion in Criminal Law
Karolina Mania (Jagiellonian University) Legal Protection of Revenge and Deepfake Porn Victims in the European Union: Findings From a Comparative Legal Study
Maciej Próchnicki (Jagiellonian University), Piotr Bystranowski (Jagiellonian University) & Bartosz Janik (University of Silesia in Katowice) What Do We Punish For? An Experimental Inquiry in Criminal Punishment
Flavio Scuderi Di Miceli (University of Palermo) Closer to the Citizen: The European Principle of Subsidiarity and Nudging
Day #3 (Friday, 28 July)
10:00–11:30 Session #1
Chair: Marco Brigaglia (University of Palermo)
Monika Zalewska (University of Lodz) Basic Norm and Fictionalism in Hans Kelsen’s General Theory of Norms
Mateusz Domagała (Krakow University of Economics) Neurobiology of Intellectual Property Law
Wiktor Iwański (Sołtysiński, Kawecki & Szlęzak) Collective Entity Behaviour in Competition and Consumer Law: An Attempt to Apply the Theory of Distributed Cognition to the Problem of Attributability of Behaviour
11:30–12:00 Coffee break
12:00–13:30 Session #2
Chair: Julia Castro (University of Alicante)
Linda Louis (Leiden University) Discriminatory Policing: Understanding Implicit Bias and Tackling the Limitation of Training
Antonino Azzarà (Roma Tre University) Heuristics and Cognitive Biases in the Use of Police Force
Izabela Skoczeń (Jagiellonian University) Lies, Common Ground, and the Law
13:30–15:00 Lunch break
15:00–17:00 Workshop: Behavioral Sciences, Criminal Law, and Criminal Policy
Mikołaj Iwański (Jagiellonian University) From Punishment to Nudge: How Behavioral Sciences Can Affect Criminal Policy
Daniel Kwiatkowski (Jagiellonian University) Heuristics, Biases, and Justice in Sentencing
Karolina Śliwecka (Jagiellonian University) Behavioral Sciences and the Scope of Culpability
Witold Zontek (Jagiellonian University) Reasonable Defensive Mistake Leading To “Mutually Justified Violence”: On Different Standards of Information Acquisition by the General Public and Police Force in Self-Defense Cases
Karolina Sikora (Jagiellonian University) The Passions of Criminal Law: Towards the Emotional and Intuitive Approach in Research on Criminal Law
Michał Derek (Jagiellonian University) The Limits of the Application of Behavioral Economics to Criminal Law
17:00–17:30 Wrap-up & goodbyes
If you have any questions, please contact Dr. Anna Żołnik (conference coordinator) at futurelawlab@uj.edu.pl.
The conference is co-funded by the Erasmus+ Programme of the European Union under the project number 2020-1-IT02-KA203-079834: Legal Reasoning and Cognitive Science (RECOGNISE). DISCLAIMER: The conference reflects the views of the speakers, and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which can be made of its contents.