Legal Innovation & Technology Lab@ Suffolk Law School
Upcoming Events
Upcoming events hosted/co-hosted by the Legal Innovation and Technology Lab.
LITCon2024: Suffolk's Annual Legal Innovation & Tech Conference
April 8, 2024. The upcoming LIT Con conference in Boston will highlight work in legal innovation and technology (LIT). If you would like to present a rapid-fire talk (LIT Bit), please reply to this open call. If you are unfamiliar with rapid-fire talks, they are are a presentation format in which speakers prepare a set number of slides which advance automatically at regular intervals to produce a short energetic presentation of definite length. See e.g., Ignite Talks and PechaKucha. If your submission is chosen, you will be asked to put together a presentation with 20 slides where each slide stays visible for 15 seconds (making for a 5 min long presentation).
Past Events
Select Recent events hosted/co-hosted by the Legal Innovation and Technology Lab.
LITCon2023: Suffolk's Annual Legal Innovation & Tech Conference
April 3, 2023. The upcoming LIT Con conference in Boston will highlight work in legal innovation and technology (LIT). If you would like to present a rapid-fire talk (LIT Bit), please reply to this open call. If you are unfamiliar with rapid-fire talks, they are are a presentation format in which speakers prepare a set number of slides which advance automatically at regular intervals to produce a short energetic presentation of definite length. See e.g., Ignite Talks and PechaKucha. If your submission is chosen, you will be asked to put together a presentation with 20 slides where each slide stays visible for 15 seconds (making for a 5 min long presentation).
A Look Ahead: Innovation, Law Schools, & the Access to Justice Gap
April 26, 2022 (4-7pm). Join program directors and faculty from Massachusetts law schools as we showcase our work and discuss how we are leveraging technology and innovation to serve our communities and prepare law students for tomorrow's practice. Participants from:
2021 Global Law Lab Showcase & Meetup
May 12, 2021 at 00:00:00 UTC (GMT) On May 12th, or May 11th depending on your timezone, a collection of law labs from across the globe have decided to gather for a virtual breakfast/cocktail reception/meetup. Unfortunately, attendees will have to bring their own food and beverages as the meetup will take place on Zoom. We will provide a number of breakout rooms and the goal is to meet and chat with folks from law labs around the world. "What's a law lab?" you ask. Check out each lab's description below (the showcase) to get a fell for their work, and plan who you would like to meet with on the 11th/12th at the meetup.
LITCon2019: Suffolk's Annual Legal Innovation & Tech Conference
April 8, 2019. The upcoming LIT Con conference in Boston will highlight work in legal innovation and technology (LIT). If you would like to present a rapid-fire talk (LIT Bit), please reply to this open call. If you are unfamiliar with rapid-fire talks, they are are a presentation format in which speakers prepare a set number of slides which advance automatically at regular intervals to produce a short energetic presentation of definite length. See e.g., Ignite Talks and PechaKucha. If your submission is chosen, you will be asked to put together a presentation with 20 slides where each slide stays visible for 15 seconds (making for a 5 min long presentation).
November 17-18, 2018. Join the Tubman Project and Suffolk's LIT Lab on November 17th and 18th to help create open source tools for public defenders. We'll have three challenges and $3,000 for the teams that can conquer them.
There are no size requirements for teams and no need to form a team prior to the event. So you can work on your own or join up with folks when you arrive.
You'll receive a full set of constraints at the event, but for the most part we're platform agnostic. Solutions must, however, be open sourced and of use to public defenders. That means they have to be able to use them. Here's a brief outline of the three challenges, build: (1) a tool to automate review of video; (2) a secure encrypted survey, think signal + google forms; and (3) a "backup my alibi" tool that collects third-party contemporaneous records to bolster ones alibi, think social media posts with geolocation info.
We're looking for developers and attorneys since legal considerations will be just as important as technical ones. More to the point, they'll often be intertwined. For example, is there a possibility that communications across an encrypted channel may be subject to discovery? How do you assure that the alibi tool doesn't get misused as a secret tracker?
Coding for Lawyers (C4L) Summit
April 10, 2018. A number of law schools have begun to offer "coding for lawyers" (or CS for lawyers) courses to students. This invite-only summit will convene C4L professors/instructors to explore the purposes, methods, and future of these courses, with an overarching goal of being descriptive, rather than prescriptive. Specifically, rather than ask "should lawyers learn to code?," this summit will ask why instructors are teaching lawyers and law students how to code, and the pros/cons of various approaches. The first summit will be hosted at the Suffolk Legal Innovation and Technology Lab directly following Suffolk's Clinnovation conference. The output of the summit will include: (1) a survey of programs; (2) a path forward with working groups; and (3) next steps for future summits (to be held each six months with a traveling component). Over time, our intent is for the community of instructors to grow and to produce free, open-source resources for schools around the world to teach coding for lawyers.
Clinnovation: Where Legal Innovation Meets Clinical Pedagogy
April 9, 2018. The upcoming Suffolk Clinnovation conference in Boston will highlight work in legal innovation and technology (LIT) as applied in a clinical legal practice setting. If you would like to present a rapid-fire talk (LIT Bit) or a standard poster presentation, please reply to this open call. If you are unfamiliar with rapid-fire talks, they are are a presentation format in which speakers prepare a set number of slides which advance automatically at regular intervals to produce a short energetic presentation of definite length. See e.g., Ignite Talks and PechaKucha. If your submission is chosen, you will be asked to put together a presentation with 20 slides where each slide stays visible for 15 seconds (making for a 5 min long presentation).
Clinnovation Website | Open Call for Rapid-Fire Talks (LIT Bits) & Poster Presentations
February 23-25, 2018. Bringing the legal industry together with tech and innovation, world-wide, with one purpose: Rapid development of solutions for improving the legal industry world-wide. The Global Legal Hackathon engages law schools, law firms and in-house departments, legal technology companies, governments, and service providers to the legal industry – across the globe. It will bring together the best thinkers, doers and practitioners in law in support of a unified vision: rapid development of solutions to improve the legal industry, world-wide. And the LIT Lab will be hosting the Boston branch.