The American Law Institute

The American Law Institute

Book and Periodical Publishing

Philadelphia, PA 3,724 followers

ALI is the leading independent organization in the U.S. producing scholarly work to clarify the law.

About us

The American Law Institute is the leading independent organization in the United States producing scholarly work to clarify, modernize, and otherwise improve the law. The Institute--made up of approximately 3,000 lawyers, judges, and law professors of the highest qualifications--drafts, discusses, revises, and publishes Restatements of the Law, model statutes, and principles of law that are enormously influential in the courts and legislatures, as well as in legal scholarship and education. ALI is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization incorporated in the District of Columbia.

Website
http://www.ali.org/
Industry
Book and Periodical Publishing
Company size
51-200 employees
Headquarters
Philadelphia, PA
Type
Nonprofit
Founded
1923

Locations

Employees at The American Law Institute

Updates

  • Discover the evolving legal terrain of AI liability and ethical obligations: Join us for insights on how the law is adapting and how to navigate the risks in this rapidly changing landscape.   The program will be led by moderator Colleen Chien (Berkeley Law) who will be accompanied by panelists Judge Richard Franklin Boulware II (U.S. District Court, District of Nevada), Mark Geistfeld (NYU Law), Tom Lue (Google DeepMind), and Andy Song (Manifold).   This ALI CLE program is taking place this Sunday, May 19 in San Francisco. We hope to see you there. https://bit.ly/3UKDiNV

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • Ready to navigate the ever-evolving legal landscape shaped by artificial intelligence? Join us on May 19 in San Francisco for a thought-provoking ALI CLE program led by moderator Colleen Chien (Berkeley Law), accompanied by panelists Judge Richard Franklin Boulware II (U.S. District Court, District of Nevada), Mark Geistfeld (NYU Law), Tom Lue (Google DeepMind), and Andy Song (Manifold). Embark on an eye-opening journey into the future of law, exploring how tort law has responded to technological innovation and what it means for the future of AI liability. https://lnkd.in/eYuM2Qbg

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • Guidance for Insurrection Act Reform Issued by Bipartisan Group Today, a bipartisan group led by Bob Bauer (NYU School of Law and former White House Counsel to President Obama) and Jack Goldsmith (Harvard Law School and former Assistant Attorney General in the George W. Bush administration) issued “Principles for Insurrection Act Reform.” The distinguished group, convened at the invitation of The American Law Institute, is made up of persons with a range of legal and political views who have a rich variety of backgrounds in constitutional law, national security law, and military law, and have held senior positions in government. The Principles propose deleting antiquated terms that lack settled contemporary meaning and strengthening conditions for the Act’s use. The Principles state that “a reformed Insurrection Act should more clearly specify (i) the goal of ensuring enforcement and (ii) the requirement that the deployment be necessary to protect public safety and security.” For example, many states and municipalities now have robust police forces, and the president has access to substantial federal law-enforcement capacity. The Principles suggest that the Insurrection Act be amended to make clear that the president may not deploy the armed forces unless “the violence [is] such that it overwhelms the capacity of federal, state, and local authorities to protect public safety and security.” The Principles also urge Congress to adopt reporting and consultation requirements, and time-limit constraints, on presidential deployments under the Insurrection Act. In particular, the Principles recommend that the reformed Insurrection Act: - Require consultation with the governor before deploying troops into any state; - Require the president to report to Congress, within 24 hours of deployment, on the need to invoke the Insurrection Act and on consultations held with state authorities; - Limit the president’s authority to deploy troops under the Act to a maximum of 30 days absent renewed congressional authorization; and - Establish a fast-track procedure for Congress to vote on renewal of presidential authority under the Insurrection Act. Finally, the Principles state that Insurrection Act reform need not and should not include a provision for judicial review. Read more or download the full report: https://bit.ly/3vQVuN9

    • No alternative text description for this image

Similar pages

Browse jobs