This paper conducts a comparative analysis of procedural guarantees applicable to automated administrative decisions that adversely affect individuals. Focusing on three scenarios—AI-driven tax assessments, algorithmic fraud detection in welfare administration, and predictive-policing systems—the chapter examines how different jurisdictions address the requirements to give reasons, ensure transparency, provide access to algorithmic information, and guarantee effective administrative and judicial remedies. It identifies a general trend toward reinforcing human oversight and expanding the duty to give reasons in response to increasing automation, while also highlighting significant divergences in transparency regimes, access to source code and training data, and the availability of collective standing. The paper further shows how prohibited AI practices (such as predictive policing under the EU AI Act) reshape the legal framework of accountability. The concluding comparative assessment identifies the convergences and persistent variations across the examined legal systems and reflects on their implications for the evolving architecture of algorithmic administrative law.
De Bellis, M. (2026). Automated Administrative Restrictive Decisions: Giving Reasons, Access, and Remedies. ITALIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC LAW, 417-444.
Automated Administrative Restrictive Decisions: Giving Reasons, Access, and Remedies
De Bellis, M
2026-01-01
Abstract
This paper conducts a comparative analysis of procedural guarantees applicable to automated administrative decisions that adversely affect individuals. Focusing on three scenarios—AI-driven tax assessments, algorithmic fraud detection in welfare administration, and predictive-policing systems—the chapter examines how different jurisdictions address the requirements to give reasons, ensure transparency, provide access to algorithmic information, and guarantee effective administrative and judicial remedies. It identifies a general trend toward reinforcing human oversight and expanding the duty to give reasons in response to increasing automation, while also highlighting significant divergences in transparency regimes, access to source code and training data, and the availability of collective standing. The paper further shows how prohibited AI practices (such as predictive policing under the EU AI Act) reshape the legal framework of accountability. The concluding comparative assessment identifies the convergences and persistent variations across the examined legal systems and reflects on their implications for the evolving architecture of algorithmic administrative law.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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