In the current stage dominated by accelerated technological transformations, the work “Criminal Justice in the Age of Technology. The Triadic Model of Judicial Deliberation” proposes an innovative analysis of the way in which technology coexists with the requirements of the rule of law. The authors develop an original theoretical model – the triadic model – that reconfigures judicial deliberation in three essential planes: factual, normative and teleological.
The book highlights the limits of automation and the risks of substituting human decision-making, firmly arguing that technology must remain a supporting tool, not a substitute for the judge. Through an interdisciplinary approach, both the opportunities of digitalization and its vulnerabilities are analyzed, and clear principles for responsible use are proposed.
The work is addressed to legal practitioners, theorists and all those interested in the future of criminal justice in a society dominated by digital technology.