
Magnus Eriksson
Doctoral student

The normativity of automated driving : a case study of embedding norms in technology
Author
Summary, in English
Autonomous driving is a technology that is currently in a phase of being developed and tested on roads in several countries. A major challenge for autonomous driving and for smart city technologies in general is regulatory challenges both regarding regulation of the technology in itself and technology as a regulator of urban space. This article examines how the development of autonomous driving embeds legal norms in technology and how conceptions of law through technology, such as Lawrence Lessig’s “Code is Law” are challenged by new technical developments. The article is based on a case study following the DriveMe project in Gothenburg, Sweden, aiming to conduct a trial of self-driving cars on ordinary roads, including conducting interviews with engineers working on the project as well as representatives of the Swedish traffic authorities. The purpose of the article is to test this new situation for norms embedded in code against the framework of “code is law” which has been a dominant perspective in socio-legal studies of technology.
Department/s
- Department of Sociology of Law
Publishing year
2017
Language
English
Pages
46-58
Publication/Series
Information & Communications Technology Law
Volume
26
Issue
1
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Routledge
Topic
- Law and Society
Keywords
- autonomous driving
- code is law
- normativity
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1360-0834