zurück
Beiträge in Handbüchern
Immaterialgüter- und Wettbewerbsrecht

Automated Decision-Making and Transparency in Administrative Law

Finck, MicheleAutomated Decision-Making and Transparency in Administrative Law in: Peter Cane et al. (Hg.), The Oxford Handbook on Comparative Administrative Law, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2020, 658 - 676.

This chapter examines the uses of automated decision-making (ADM) systems in administrative settings. First, it introduces the current enthusiasm surrounding computational intelligence before a cursory overview of machine learning and deep learning is provided. The chapter thereafter examines the potential of these forms of data analysis in administrative processes. In addition, this chapter underlines that, depending on how they are used; these tools risk impacting pejoratively on established concepts of administrative law. This is illustrated through the example of the principle of transparency. To conclude, a number of guiding principles designed to ensure the sustainable use of these tools are outlined and topics for further research are suggested.

External Link (DOI)

Also published as: Max Planck Institute for Innovation & Competition Research Paper No. 19-10 under the title: Automated Decision-Making and Administrative Law