Kumar & Kumar on Governing Algorithmic Agents and Human Work

Prof. Dr. Jay Kumar Pandey (Shri Ramswaroop Memorial University) & Dr. Rajendra Kumar (University of Lucknow – Faculty of Law) have posted Governing the Algorithmic Agent: Confronting Overt and Covert Challenges to Justice and the Future of Work on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

This research article presents a novel framework for analyzing the multifaceted impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on legal systems and the future of professional work. Moving beyond a monolithic view of technological disruption, it argues that the challenges posed by Autonomous AI Agents manifest along two distinct vectors: overt, confrontational threats and covert, integrative transformations. The first vector encompasses the “algorithmic panopticon”-highly visible applications like predictive policing and automated workforce surveillance that frontally challenge principles of due process, privacy, and labor rights. Conversely, the second vector involves a subtler, “accommodationist” creep, wherein agentic AI is woven into the fabric of daily professional practice. Tools for e-discovery and “robomediation” support do not just augment human capability; they gradually reshape legal reasoning, normalize algorithmic decision-making, and risk displacing essential human skills. By synthesizing analyses of AI in policing, alternative dispute resolution (ADR), and democratic governance, this paper maps this dual-front challenge, using the Indian context as a critical case study for workforce transformation. It concludes that while overt threats garner more scrutiny, the insidious nature of covert integration may pose a more profound, long-term risk to both institutional resilience and the future of meaningful human work.