Blind Justice, Seeing Machines: AI, Prediction, and the Future of the Law. An Italian American Dialogue

The scales of justice have long been held by a blindfolded figure — an emblem of impartiality untainted by identity or prejudice. Artificial intelligence offers something different: a justice that does not avert its eyes, but watches everything, remembers everything, and predicts with statistical confidence what human judges can only weigh in conscience. Whether that constitutes progress — or its precise inversion — is the animating question of this conference.
Blind Justice, Seeing Machines brings together American and Italian jurists, legal scholars, technologists, and policymakers for a transatlantic dialogue on the integration of AI into legal systems and adjudicatory processes — challenging foundational concepts of due process, judicial independence, and the irreducibly human dimension of legal judgment.
The dialogue unfolds against a sharply asymmetric regulatory landscape. The EU AI Act classifies systems used in the administration of justice among those presenting the highest risk, imposing strict transparency obligations and prohibitions on certain automated determinations. The United States has pursued a fragmented approach, yet instructive models are emerging. The New York State Unified Court System's October 2025 Interim Policy — the first of its kind for any state court system — establishes system-wide guardrails while preserving each judge's authority to regulate AI before their own bench, affirming that AI may never substitute for judicial reasoning and that judges remain solely responsible for all decisions. The contrast between the EU's top-down risk classification regime and New York's decentralized, judge-by-judge governance model frames the central comparative question of this conference.
Italy's civil law tradition, shaped by a constitutional court of enduring influence and a rich philosophical inheritance on reason and human dignity, offers a distinctive counterpoint to the common law pragmatism governing American responses to technological disruption. Blind Justice, Seeing Machines proceeds from the conviction that the governance of AI in law is a legal problem of the first order — one that demands the full engagement of the profession on both sides of the Atlantic.
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In Collaboration With
OSSERVATORI SULLA GIUSTIZIA CIVILE
CONSIGLIO DELL’ORDINE DEGLI AVVOCATI DI ROMA
- April 21, 2026
- 11:00 AM
- 1:30 PM
- 0.0
- Outside USA
- Virtual Participation
- Instituto C.A. Jemolo
Viale Giulio Cesare, 31, 00192 Roma RM, Italy
, RM 31-00192
- Avv. Filippo Bagni, PhD, Legal Officer at European Commission, Brussels; Research Fellow at CybeRights Research Centre, Florence
- Avv. Agostino Clemente, Partner Ughi e Nunziante; University of L’Aquila; Internet Governance Forum Italy Committee
- Consigliere Germana Lo Sapio, Judge TAR, ref AI for the Association of European Administrative Judges (AEAJ)
- Hon. Angela Iannacci, Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the State of New York, Appellate Division, Second Judicial Department; Co-Chair of the Advisory Committee on Artificial Intelligence and The Courts of the NYS Unified Court System
- Luca Melchionna, Esq., Melchionna PLLC; Vice-Chair, Business Law Section, NYSBA; Chair, Technology & Venture Law Committee, NYSBA; Legal Counselor, European Public Law Organization at the United Nations, New York
- Consigliere Andrea Mirenda, Consiglio Superiore della Magistratura/High Council of the Italian Judiciary
- Prof. Alberto De Franceschi, Full Professor of Private Law, Digital Law and Environmental Sustainability, and International Trade Law at the University of Ferrara, Italy
- Claudia Morelli, Tech and Law Journalist, Moderator
- Gen. Luigi Cortellessa, Commissario Straordinario A.C. Jemolo Institute, Rome
- Avv. Andrea Melucco, Responsabile Scientifico A.C. Jemolo Institute, Rome
- Hybrid
- BUS42126
- Business Law Section
- Committee on Artificial Intelligence and Emerging Technologies
- Technology and Venture Law Committee
- International Section


