Foreword: Key Developments in EU Law and the Role of the EU Court of Justice, AG Maciej Szpunar (Court of Justice of the European Union)
1. Introduction, Maria Bergstrom (Uppsala University) and Valsamis Mitsilegas (University of Liverpool)
Part One: AI General - What are the Challenges and Initiatives of AI?
2. AI and Justice - from Policy to Practice, Gosta Petri (European Commission)
3. Council of Europe Initiatives on Artificial Intelligence with Special Focus on the Right to Privacy and Data Protection, Peter Kimpian (Council of Europe)
4. The Challenges of AI: A Mapping Exercise, Karine Caunes (CAIDP, Center for AI and Digital Policy)
Part Two: Digital Data, Trust and Fundamental Rights in the Internal Market Context
5. The EU's Digital Package: Striking a Balance for Fundamental Rights in the Proposed DSA and DMA Regulations, Annegret Engel and Xavier Groussot (Lund University)
6. Product Liability in the Future Framework of AI (Technology) Regulation, Beatrice Schutte (University of Helsinki)
7. Defining Risk and Promoting Trust in AI Systems, Johanna Chamberlain and Andreas Kotsios (Uppsala University)
8. The Proposed Anti-Money Laundering Authority and the Future of FIU Collaboration in Europe, Eleni Kosta (TILT/Tilburg University)
Part Three: AI and Criminal Justice
9. Algorithmic Predictions, Justice and Privacy, Yulia Razmetaeva (Yaroslav Mudryi National Law University, Kharkiv)
10. Artificial Intelligence in Criminal Justice: Strengthening or Challenging the Rule of Law?, Emmanouil Billis (Max Planck Institute for the Study of Crime, Security and Law)
11. Using AI Systems in the Promotion of EU Defence Rights: The CrossJustice Project, Michele Caianiello (University of Bologna)
12. The Challenges of Deepfake Technology in the Context of Political Disinformation, Clementina Salvi (Queen Mary University of London)
13. The UK's Strategy on AI - Implications for English Criminal Law, Rudi Fortson (KC; Visiting Professor Queen Mary University of London; and Honorary Visiting Professor of Law at the University of Liverpool)
Part Four: AI and Evidence
14. AI Evidence: Ensuring a Fair Trial in the Digital World, Katalin Ligeti (University of Luxembourg)
15. AI-Based Means of Evidence and the Defendant's Rights in the European Union, Eftychia Bampasika (LL.M., Attorney at Law)
16. Transborder Access to e-Evidence - Data Protection Concerns under the e-Evidence Regulation, Teresa Quintel (European Parliament) and David Cole (University of Luxembourg)
Part Five: AI and Migration, Databases and Mobility
17. The Traveller and the Digital Border, Elsbeth Guild (Queen Mary University of London)
18. Towards Artificially Intelligent EU Migration, Asylum and Border Management? The AI Act, Interoperable Large-Scale IT Systems and the Role of Agencies, Niovi Vavoula (University of Luxembourg)
19. The Digital Border and the Rule of Law. Lessons from the Establishment of the European Travel Information and Authorisation System (ETIAS), Valsamis Mitsilegas (University of Liverpool)
20. Digital Controls, Mobility and Surveillance; the Social Universe of "Reasonable Suspicion" and Its Different Guilds, Didier Bigo (Sciences Po and King's College London)