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Legal Innovation & Technology Lab
@ Suffolk Law School

'The future is already here—it's just not evenly distributed.' - William Gibson. Suffolk's Legal Innovation and Technology Lab: providing a legal tech time machine to those in need.

The Legal Innovation and Technology (LIT) Lab is an experiential program combining the vision of our Legal Innovation and Technology Institute with the pedagogy and legal services mission of our Clinical Programs. The Lab allows students to work as part of a consultancy and research & development (R&D) shop focused on legal tech and data science work. Active areas of research involve, but are not limited to, the construction of expert systems/guided interviews (e.g., chatbots) and algorithmic codification of tacit knowledge (i.e., training computers to replicate human decisions). See examples.

Lab students develop legal technology and data science solutions for organizational clients (e.g., legal aid organizations, courts, firms, and non-profits), helping them improve efficiency and effectiveness. Theses services are provided to organizational clients, who frequently do not have in-house expertise in automating tools, engaging in process improvement, and data analytics.


Support the Lab

A Look Ahead

Become an Affiliate!

Through its new Affiliates Program, the LIT Lab provides members with connections to experts and law students working with emerging legal services technologies, while growing the LIT Lab’s capacity to serve disadvantaged communities.

The Legal Innovation & Technology Lab (LIT Lab) is a collaboration between Suffolk Law’s Clinical Program and Institute on Legal Innovation and Technology. At the core of the nation's No. 1-ranked legal technology program, the LIT Lab:

  • Expands the public’s access to urgently needed legal services, information, and ultimately, to justice.
  • Enables law firms, courts, legal services providers, and corporate legal departments to become more efficient and effective through innovation and technology.
  • The LIT Lab develops cutting-edge innovations to benefit its partners, clients, and diverse communities, while educating future lawyers. To carry out its work, the LIT Lab integrates the pedagogy and service-oriented mission of Suffolk Law’s Clinical Programs, which are regularly ranked in the top 15 of all clinical programs across the nation.

    Read the Brochure

    Featured Affiliate
    Hello Prenup

    Featured Projects

    Document Assembly Line Screenshot

    The Document Assembly Line

    The Document Assembly Line project has produced a set of open-source tools and processes to help groups quickly and effectively create mobile-friendly online court forms and pro se materials. The documentation provided here aims to help groups adapt this work and create local versions of the assembly line.

    Though we have focused on producing Massachusetts content at https://courtformsonline.org, we have built our tools with replicability in mind. Our novel code is released under an MIT License, and we have intentionally built on the open source docassemble platform.

    Learn more

    Spot Homepage Screenshot

    Spot, an AI Issue Spotter

    Spot is an issue spotter. Give Spot a non-lawyer's description of a situation, and it returns a list of likely issues from the National Subject Matter Index (NSMI), Version 2. The NSMI provides the legal aid community with a standard nomenclature for talking about client needs. It includes issues like eviction, foreclosure, bankruptcy, and child support. Spot is provided as a service over an API. Mostly, this means it's built for use by computer programs, not people. Coders can build things (like websites) on top of the API. The hope is that by automating part of issue identification, developers will use Spot to help people in need of legal assistance better access available resources.

    Learn more | Test drive

    Coding the Law

    Coding the Law

    Learn how to think about technologies in the law by building your own. In this project-based course, open to non-programmers and coders alike, we explore the technical, legal, and ethical dimensions behind the use of computer algorithms by legal practitioners and the justice system. Projects range from the creation of simple document review and automation tools to the construction of expert systems and narrow AIs.

    Visit the course website

    Legal Tech Class Screenshot

    Legal Tech Class

    The aim of this project is to create a collaboratively built "textbook" for teaching law school classes about legal technology. Currently, the class has contributors from around the world. Exercises help students get started right away building legal technology with open-source tools while touching on theories and motivations for legal technology—including the access to justice gap, the future of the legal profession, and ethical considerations.

    Visit the "textbook"