TY - BOOK
T1 - Solicitors’ attitudes toward lawtech adoption:
T2 - Summary of findings and implications for the legal sector
AU - Hodgkinson, Gerard P.
AU - Gulati, Siddharth
AU - Nokes, Karen
AU - James, Andrew
AU - Kununka, Sophia
N1 - Professor Gerard P. Hodgkinson, Dr Siddharth Gulati, and Professor Andrew D. James are respectively Professor of Strategic Management and Behavioural Science, Research Associate in Privacy, Trust and Data Protection, and Professor of Innovation Management and Policy at the Manchester Institute of Innovation Research, Alliance Manchester Business School, University of Manchester. Dr Karen Nokes is a Lecturer in Law at the Faculty of Laws, University College London.
At the commencement of the work outlined in this report, Dr Sophia Kununka was based at the Manchester Institute of Innovation Research, where she was employed from October 2019-June 2022 as a member of the research team, in which capacity she assisted in the conceptualization and development of the reported study and in the development and pilot testing of the survey instrument.
Steve King is Head of Research and Insight, and Patrice Neita is Insight Manager, working in the Futures and Insight department, at The Law Society.
For queries and more information about this report please contact Professor Gerard P. Hodgkinson <[email protected]> and Steve King
<[email protected]>
PY - 2023/6/28
Y1 - 2023/6/28
N2 - The adoption of digital technologies and related advances inartificial intelligence in the delivery of legal services has the potential tofundamentally transform how the sector operates in respect of allaspects of its work. These developments pose some highly important unanswered questions regarding the attitudes and behaviour of legal services professionals toward them. Addressing this shortfall, this report summarises the findings of a representative, cross-sectional survey of the attitudes and beliefs of 656 solicitors in England and Wales concerning the adoption of lawtech.
AB - The adoption of digital technologies and related advances inartificial intelligence in the delivery of legal services has the potential tofundamentally transform how the sector operates in respect of allaspects of its work. These developments pose some highly important unanswered questions regarding the attitudes and behaviour of legal services professionals toward them. Addressing this shortfall, this report summarises the findings of a representative, cross-sectional survey of the attitudes and beliefs of 656 solicitors in England and Wales concerning the adoption of lawtech.
UR - https://research.manchester.ac.uk/en/publications/af24fd78-c071-4dca-b75e-5e4db75d169b
M3 - Commissioned report
SN - 978-1-78446-245-1
BT - Solicitors’ attitudes toward lawtech adoption:
PB - The Law Society
CY - London
ER -