Corinna Coupette (Aalto University): Toward a Computational Theory of Legal Systems
Speaker Series der Minerva Fast Track Research Group "Artificial Justice"
- Datum: 03.12.2025
- Uhrzeit: 14:00
- Ort: Online-Veranstaltung
Der Vortrag findet auf Englisch statt.
About the Speaker
Corinna Coupette is an Assistant
Professor of Computer Science at Aalto University, where they head the
Telos Lab conducting research in the intersection of law, computer
science, and complex systems. From January 2026 onward, they will be
leading the ERC Starting Grant Project CompLex: Toward a Computational
Theory of Legal Complexity. The overarching goal of Corinna's research
is to understand how we can combine code, data, and law to better model,
measure, and manage complex societal systems. Currently, they are
particularly interested in computational legal theory – with
implications for how we approach challenges like regulating AI,
protecting democratic institutions, and realizing the sustainability
transition. Corinna's interdisciplinary research is enabled by their
undergraduate, graduate, and postgraduate education in law and computer
science, including PhDs in both subjects completed at the Max Planck
Institute for Tax Law and Public Finance and the Max Planck Institute
for Informatics.
About the Topic
From “legal technology” to
“computational legal studies” and “digital law”, there are many
opportunities to build bridges between law and computer science.
However, most work in the intersection of these disciplines has taken an
internal point of view, motivated by the practical challenges of legal
work or by specific doctrinal and empirical research questions. As a
result, the capacity of computer science to inform external perspectives
on legal systems, as commonly adopted in legal theory and comparative
law, has remained relatively underexplored. Setting out to change that,
in this talk, I develop my vision for a computational theory of legal
systems (computational legal theory). Drawing on examples from my own
prior and ongoing work, I sketch how concepts and techniques from
computer science and network science can help us build legal theory that
is both ontologically and methodologically computational: allowing us
to understand legal systems as computational systems, using
computational tools.
About the Speaker Series
The Speaker Series of the new Minerva Fast Track Research Group “Artificial Justice” is organised by Katharina Isabel Schmidt. The Series invites guest speakers who work at the intersection between law, computer science, and the humanities. Neither technical nor juristic knowledge is a prerequisite for participation — the Series is aimed at anyone with an interest in critical and interdisciplinary perspectives on “Law and AI”. The event takes place on Zoom and is scheduled to last one hour.
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