Liability for Robots: Legal Challenges and Economics Analysis
-
SeriesACLE Law & Economics Seminars
-
Speaker(s)Francesco Parisi (University of Minnesota, United States)
-
FieldOrganizations and Markets
-
LocationHybrid event: Zoom and Roeterseiland campus (REC) building A, room number A3.15 (Moot Court room on the 3rd floor)
Amsterdam -
Date and time
December 13, 2022
13:00 - 14:15
Abstract
In robot torts, robots carry out activities that are partially
controlled by a human operator. The care of the operator and the
prospective victim can reduce the likelihood of an accident. The problem
for a policymaker is to design liability regimes that incentivize both
the operator’s and victim’s optimal care, while inducing manufacturers
to improve the safety of robots by internalizing the expected cost of
non-negligent accidents. In this paper, we suggest the possibility of
blending negligence-based rules for robot operators and their potential
victims, and strict liability rules robots by manufacturers, to create
care incentives and R&D incentives for developing safer robots. We
refer to these regimes as rules of “manufacturer residual liability.” By
making both operators and victims liable for accidents due to their
negligence, the rule incentivizes them to act diligently. Moreover, by
making the manufacturers residually liable for non-negligent accidents,
the rule incentivizes optimal investments in R&D for robots’ safety.
In turn, this will minimize the market price of safer robots, driving
unsafe technology out of the market. Thanks to the percolation effect of
residual liability, operators (and victims) will also be incentivized
to adopt optimal activity levels in robots’ usage.
Paper
The paper can be found here.
Practicalities
This event will be a hybrid event. The seminar will take place in
Roeterseiland campus (REC) building A, room number A3.15 (Moot Court
room on the 3rd floor), and will also be online via Zoom: registere here for online attendance.