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Facilitating Judicial Cooperation in the EU
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The volume develops an innovative analysis of EU cooperation mechanisms in the criminal matter through the lens of a computational approach to the law. This multi-level research tackles both EU and...
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26 June 2025

The volume develops an innovative analysis of EU cooperation mechanisms in the criminal matter through the lens of a computational approach to the law. This multi-level research tackles both EU and national legislation.
The comparative analysis of the European Arrest Warrant, the European Investigation Order and Regulation 1805/2018 is integrated with legal informatics research, translating into computable language the relevant EU and national legislation.
This breakthrough perspective highlights potentially uncovered deficit of the normative texts and enhances comparative analysis of legal systems, adding a novel viewpoint to the debate on the interaction between criminal matter and technology.
Price: $195.00
Pages: 554
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill | Nijhoff
Publication Date:
26 June 2025
ISBN: 9789004705784
Format: Hardcover
Giulia Lasagni, Assistant Professor in Criminal Procedure at the University of Bologna. She has extensively published on European criminal justice and its relationship with technological development, including Banking Supervision and Criminal Investigation. Comparing the EU and US Experiences (Springer/Giappichelli, 2019). She coordinated as Principal Investigator the FACILEX project that based the research of the present volume.
Giuseppe Contissa, Associate Professor in Legal Informatics and IT Law at the University of Bologna. He has published extensively on AI and law, computable models of legal reasoning and knowledge, including Digital Technologies and the Law (Giappichelli, 2024).
Michele Caianiello, Full Professor in Criminal Procedure at the University of Bologna and Editor-in-Chief of the European Journal of Crime, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice. He has published three monographs and several articles on crucial topics of criminal justice, especially from comparative and supranational perspectives.
Giuseppe Contissa, Associate Professor in Legal Informatics and IT Law at the University of Bologna. He has published extensively on AI and law, computable models of legal reasoning and knowledge, including Digital Technologies and the Law (Giappichelli, 2024).
Michele Caianiello, Full Professor in Criminal Procedure at the University of Bologna and Editor-in-Chief of the European Journal of Crime, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice. He has published three monographs and several articles on crucial topics of criminal justice, especially from comparative and supranational perspectives.