Authored By: Khadija Bilal
Pakistan College of Law
Introduction
Legal research has always been a foundational component of legal practice, shaping the quality of legal arguments, judicial reasoning, and access to justice. Traditionally, legal research involved extensive manual engagement with physical law libraries, reported cases, statutes, and commentaries. While the transition to digital databases significantly improved accessibility, it did not entirely eliminate the time-intensive and repetitive nature of legal research. In recent years, Artificial Intelligence (AI) has emerged as a transformative force in legal research, offering unprecedented speed, efficiency, and analytical capabilities.
During the Record of Law internship programme, a dedicated session on the Use of Artificial Intelligence in Legal Research highlighted how AI-powered tools are increasingly shaping modern legal practice by assisting legal professionals in navigating vast volumes of legal data more effectively.1 However, alongside its advantages, the growing reliance on AI also raises concerns regarding accuracy, over dependence, ethical responsibility, and the preservation of human legal reasoning. This article critically examines the role of AI in legal research, analysing its benefits, limitations, and the safeguards necessary to ensure that AI enhances rather than undermines legal expertise.
Evolution of Legal Research and the Emergence of AI
The evolution of legal research can be broadly categorised into three stages: traditional, digital, and AI-powered. Traditional legal research was primarily dependent on physical law libraries and manual case searching, which made the process challenging and resource constrained. The digital era brought online legal databases, keyword-based searches, and electronic case law repositories, which improved accessibility but still required a significant amount of human labour.
AI-powered legal research represents the next stage of this evolution. Artificial intelligence (AI) tools can interpret legal queries in plain language and find pertinent cases and statutes based on underlying legal principles rather than just keywords by utilising technologies like natural language processing (NLP), contextual search, and automated citation analysis.2 This change frees up legal professionals to concentrate more on strategy and analysis than on obtaining information.
Understanding AI Tools in Legal Research
AI applications in legal research are intended to augment, rather than supplant, the efforts of legal professionals. As highlighted in the Record of Law AI session, these tools provide several significant functionalities. 3Initially, Natural Language Processing (NLP) empowers AI systems to comprehend complex legal enquiries expressed in everyday language, thereby mitigating the technical impediments inherent in conventional keyword-based searches. Furthermore, AI-facilitated case law analysis enables researchers to pinpoint pertinent precedents and judicial rationale with enhanced contextual precision.
Furthermore, AI applications streamline the processes of automated citation creation and source validation, thereby assisting researchers in maintaining accurate formatting and direct connections to primary legal materials. This capability proves especially beneficial within the context of scholarly and professional documentation, where precise citation practices are of paramount importance. Nevertheless, the session also emphasised the necessity of not depending exclusively on AI tools, highlighting the significance of verifying and critically assessing the outputs produced by AI.4
Practical Application of AI Tools in Legal Research
The Record of Law internship program familiarised interns with a range of AI-powered research tools, showcasing their real-world applications in legal work. Zotero, for example, was presented as a vital reference management tool, now augmented with AI capabilities. This software enables researchers to organise, store, and automatically create citations for cases, statutes, and scholarly materials, thereby greatly simplifying the research and writing workflow.5
Similarly, CARA AI by Case text was presented as a contextual research tool capable of analysing uploaded legal documents to suggest relevant cases and statutes that may otherwise be overlooked. By moving beyond keyword-based searches, CARA AI assists legal researchers in identifying hidden precedents and strengthening the comprehensiveness of legal arguments.6 Fast case, another AI-powered platform, offers relevance-based case ranking, citator functions, and visualisation tools to assess the strength and authority of legal precedents.7
These tools collectively demonstrate how AI can enhance the depth and efficiency of legal research when used responsibly and in conjunction with human judgment.
Benefits of AI-Powered Legal Research
One of the most significant advantages of AI in legal research is efficiency. AI tools can reduce research time by up to 70–80%, enabling quicker access to relevant case law and statutes.8 This efficiency allows legal professionals to dedicate more time to legal analysis, interpretation, and client-focused activities.
AI enhances precision by connecting research findings with validated sources and cross referenced legal documents, thus mitigating the potential for human mistakes. Moreover, AI broadens the scope of case analysis, compelling researchers to incorporate a more extensive array of pertinent legal authorities. From a professional standpoint, proficiency in AI tools confers a competitive edge, given that technological adeptness is becoming progressively important in contemporary legal practice.9
Challenges and Ethical Concerns
AI-driven legal research, regardless of its advantages, is not without significant drawbacks. A primary issue relates to accuracy, specifically, AI systems risk producing outdated or erroneous information if their training data lacks the most current legal updates.10 Furthermore, over reliance on AI presents a potential danger, as excessive dependence could undermine essential legal reasoning and analytical capabilities.
Jurisdictional limitations also remain a concern, particularly where AI tools are primarily trained on foreign legal systems and may not fully account for local legal nuances. Ethical considerations, including data confidentiality and professional responsibility, further complicate the integration of AI into legal research. As highlighted in the Record of Law session, AI should be treated as an assistant rather than a substitute for legal expertise.11
Safeguards and Best Practices
Several precautions must be taken in order to reduce these risks. The legal profession should always cross-check information using multiple research tools and compare AI-generated findings to primary legal sources. To guarantee that AI outputs are interpreted accurately and morally, human oversight and the use of professional judgement are essential.
Additionally, continuous learning and adaptation are crucial, as AI technologies evolve rapidly. By staying informed about new tools and best practices, legal professionals can integrate AI into their research workflows responsibly while preserving the integrity of legal reasoning.12
Conclusion
Artificial Intelligence has undeniably transformed legal research, offering enhanced efficiency, accuracy, and accessibility. When used responsibly, AI-powered tools can significantly improve the quality of legal research and contribute to better legal outcomes. However, AI must not replace the critical thinking, judgment, and ethical responsibility that define the legal profession.
As emphasised during the Record of Law internship programme, the future of legal practice lies in the intelligent integration of AI tools with human expertise. 13 By treating AI as a supportive assistant rather than a decision-maker, legal professionals can harness its potential while safeguarding the foundational principles of legal reasoning and justice.
Reference(S):
1 Richard Susskind, Tomorrow’s Lawyers: An Introduction to Your Future (2nd edn, OUP 2017)
2 Frank Pasquale, ‘A Rule of Persons, Not Machines: The Limits of Legal Automation’ (2019) 87 George Washington Law Review 1
3 Gary E Marchant and Wendell Wallach, ‘Artificial Intelligence and the Law’ (2015) 5 IEEE Intelligent Systems 10
4John Armour and others, ‘AI and the Legal Profession’ (2019) University of Oxford Faculty of Law Working Paper No 7/2019
5 Law Society of England and Wales, Artificial Intelligence and the Legal Profession (2018)
6 Daniel Martin Katz, ‘Quantitative Legal Prediction or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Start Preparing for the Data-Driven Future of the Legal Services Industry’ (2013) 62 Emory Law Journal 909
7 Remus Dana and Frank Levy, ‘Can Robots Be Lawyers? Computers, Lawyers, and the Practice of Law’ (2017) 30 Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics 501
8 OECD, Artificial Intelligence in Society (OECD Publishing 2019)
9 Richard Susskind, Online Courts and the Future of Justice (OUP 2019)
10 Mireille Hildebrandt, ‘Law as Computation in the Era of Artificial Legal Intelligence’ (2018) 68 University of Toronto Law Journal 12
11 Surden Harry, ‘Machine Learning and Law’ (2014) 89 Washington Law Review 87
12 European Commission for the Efficiency of Justice (CEPEJ), European Ethical Charter on the Use of Artificial Intelligence in Judicial Systems (2018)
13 Bar Council of England and Wales, The Ethical Implications of AI for the Legal Profession (2021)





