

Associate Professor
Docent in Sociology of Law, Doctor in Legal Philosophy
Research areas
- Law and digitalization
- New materialist and posthumanist legal theory
- Intellectual property and property law
My research focuses on the change in law under the influence of different forms of digital technologies. In particular, I utilize and develop critical legal theory based on new materialist and posthumanist theory to scrutinize the control over life in a digitized society. Current research also critically engages with whether and how artificial intelligence may function as a means for control beyond the dominant understandings of property and law.
Ongoing Research Projects
Vulnerability in the Automated State
Digital government and AI in the public sector aim to promote efficiency, reduce bureaucracy, and improve government services. For citizens with average education, income, digital and literacy skills, automation has indeed facilitated the exercise of rights and duties before government. Faster tax-returns and responses to adjudication requests are examples of positive outcomes. However, the benefits of digitalization and automation are not equally distributed. Every year, thousands of vulnerable citizens (e.g., seniors, low-literate) fail to exercise their rights in Scandinavia because they are not always able to engage independently with digital technology. Abundant public policy and digital humanities literature has discussed similar phenomena regarding digital exclusion. However, existing rules and principles of public law do not account for administrative vulnerability in the automated state, that is, the inability to exercise rights on equal terms in a context where public services are mainly digital and human decision-makers have been partially replaced by automation. We know little about how administrative vulnerability affects the legal position of citizens, how government fails them, and how to improve it. What we know is that this problem is urgent because vulnerable citizens—including in Sweden— get lost in complex administrative procedures. Their mistakes are often regarded as potential fraud and mistakenly sanctioned as such.
The key research question of this project is: How should administrative vulnerability be accounted for in the automation of administrative decision-making procedures? With three interdisciplinary subprojects, we aim to (1) develop a new typology of vulnerability; (2) assess how digital government impacts the legal position of citizens in Sweden; (3) identify empowerment instruments and select best practices for more inclusive digital government, drawing on insights from comparable jurisdictions (Denmark, Norway). This project’s methods include semi-structured interviews to identify key vulnerabilities experienced by citizens and comparative legal research methods to understand available empowerment instruments.
https://portal.research.lu.se/en/projects/vulnerability-in-the-automated-state
Publications
Displaying of publications. Sorted by year, then title.
Om skadan och varandet för det akademiska arbetet i den tid som återstår
Jannice Käll
(2025) Minnesskrift tillägnad Karl Dahlstrand
Book chapterRemissyttrande: Några frågor om grundläggande fri- och rättigheter (SOU 2025:2)
Jannice Käll
(2025)
Consultation responseFeminist Theory and International Law: Posthuman Perspectives By Emily Jones, London: Routledge, 2023
Jannice Käll
(2024) Journal of Law and Society, 51 p.290-293
ReviewMore-than-human rights to data
Jannice Käll
(2024) Non-Human Rights : Critical Perspectives , p.189-205
Book chapterProperty Rights Control in the Data-Driven Economy : The Media Ecology of Blockchain Registries
Jannice Käll
(2023) The Routledge Handbook of Ecomedia Studies , p.187-193
Book chapterCritical posthumanism, justice, and law
Jannice Käll
(2022) Palgrave Handbook of Critical Posthumanism , p.629-649
Book chapterThe potential for new materialist justice via Nordic feminist perspectives of law
Jannice Käll
(2021) Nordic Journal on Law and Society, 3 p.1-28
Journal articleGoverning Smart Spaces Through Autonomous Vehicles
Jannice Käll
(2020) MPI Studies on Intellectual Property and Competition Law , p.125-140
Book chapterThe Materiality of Data as Property
Jannice Käll
(2020) Harvard International Law Journal, Frontiers
Journal articleKartläggning av förekomsten av könsstereotyp och sexistisk reklam - slutredovisning
Jannice Käll
(2019)
ReportPatent policy and the right to science andculture
Jannice Käll
(2017) Negotiating Cultural Rights : issues at stake, challenges and recommendations
Book chapterA Posthuman Data Subject? The Right to Be Forgotten and Beyond
Jannice Käll
(2017) German Law Journal, 18 p.1145-1162
Journal article
Background
Jannice Käll received her LL.D. in Legal Philosophy from the department of law, Gothenburg Unversity, Sweden in 2017. She also holds an LL.M. and an M.Sc. in Intellectual Capital Management from Gothenburg Unversity, Sweden, both from 2009.