"Law is Code: A Software Engineering Approach to Analyzing the
United States Code"
written in collaboration with William Li, Pablo Azar, and Andrew Lo
of MIT CSAIL and Berkman Alumnus Phil Hill.
Abstract:
The agglomeration of rules and regulations over time has produced a
body of legal code that no single individual can fully comprehend.
This complexity produces inefficiencies, makes the processes of
understanding and changing the law difficult, and frustrates the
fundamental principle that the law should provide fair notice to the
governed. In this article, we take a quantitative, unbiased, and
software-engineering approach to analyze the evolution of the United
States Code from 1926 to today. Software engineers frequently face
the challenge of understanding and managing large, structured
collections of instructions, directives, and conditional statements,
and we adapt and apply their techniques to the U.S. Code over time.
Our work produces insights into the structure of the U.S. Code as a
whole, its strengths and vulnerabilities, and new ways of thinking
about individual laws. For example, we identify the first appearance
and spread of important terms in the U.S. Code like "whistleblower"
and "privacy." We also analyze and visualize the network structure
of certain substantial reforms, including the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (PPACA) and the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act, and show how the interconnections of
references can increase complexity and create the potential for
unintended consequences. Our work is a timely illustration of
computational approaches to law as the legal profession embraces
technology for scholarship, to increase efficiency, and to improve
access to justice.
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2511947
The final version will be available this spring in the Journal of
Business & Technology Law.