AI can process thousands of legal records in seconds. Humans take weeks and need coffee breaks. The challenge is making sure speed does not replace fairness.
AI is already being used in parts of the justice system to support decision-making. While it can improve efficiency, it raises serious questions about bias and fairness. Should technology ever influence decisions about someone’s freedom?
#utech#LawAndOrder#justice
Since UTech law students now have the AI Practice Direction on their reading list, it shows proof that the syllabus is keeping pace with Jamaica’s evolving justice system. Tomorrow’s bar, today’s homework. #JamaicanJusticeSystem#UniveristyofTechnologyJamaica
For UTech law students and young lawyers, the AI Practice Direction is a preview of the future. Tomorrow’s legal professionals will be judged not just on their arguments, but on how safely they can integrate AI into their work. #UTech#UniveristyofTechnologyJamaica#JamaicanLaw
If you’re a UTech law student and you can explain Jamaica’s AI court rules to your fellow classmates and other people, then congratulations you’re officially bilingual in legal and tech talk. #UTech#UniveristyofTechnologyJamaica#JamaicanLaw
UTech law students have front‑row seats to see how judges, lawyers and technologists struggle with the same question: how much should courts trust AI? Perfect time to sharpen those critical thinking skills. #Utech#UniversityofTechnologyJamaica#JamaicanLaw
Some UTech law students will soon be the first generation of Jamaican lawyers who can say, “Yes, I was trained with AI guidelines already in place.” That’s a serious career edge. #JamaicanLaw#JamaicanJusticeSystem