Call for Papers
SPRiM Issue 2026: Labour Law in the Face of the Gig Economy, Artificial Intelligence and New Models of Employment
The Editorial Board of Studies in Law: Research Papers invites Authors to submit scholarly papers for thematic issue 2026, devoted to the challenges faced by contemporary labour law in the era of technological and socio-economic transformations.
The issue will focus on questions related to the transformation of the labour market, in particular such phenomena as:
• the gig economy and platform work,
• automation and algorithmisation of employment processes,
• the impact of artificial intelligence on employment relations,
• new forms and models of work, including remote, hybrid and project-based work,
• challenges to the protection of employee rights in the digital environment,
• the legal status of persons working outside the traditional employment relationship,
• the role of the state and international organisations, including the EU and the ILO, in shaping new protective frameworks,
• constitutional and ethical aspects of the use of AI in the workplace, such as the right to privacy, the right to disconnect and the transparency of algorithmic decision-making.
We welcome submissions of doctrinal and empirical papers, as well as interdisciplinary studies combining law with economics, sociology of work, philosophy and new technologies.
SPRiM Issue 2027: Family Law in the Age of New Technologies: Challenges and Boundaries
For issue 2027 of Studies in Law: Research Papers, we invite Authors to undertake a multifaceted reflection on the challenges faced by family law in the context of the dynamic development of technology. We are particularly interested in papers addressing, among others:
• family law in the face of cultural, migration-related and cross-border changes,
• the impact of digitalisation on family and parental relationships,
• standards for the protection of children’s rights in the digital era,
• bioethical and constitutional limits of state interference in family life through the use of technology,
• the tasks entrusted to family judges and court probation officers in the context of technological change,
• the use of technological tools in mediation and judicial proceedings in family matters.
We welcome scholarly articles, case comments and case studies, both from the perspective of Polish law and from international or comparative law perspectives.
No. 38 (2026)
Published: 2026-07-06
eISSN: 2451-0807
English
Język polski