ENSURING THE INEVITABILITY OF LIABILITY FOR CRIMES RELATED TO ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN THE REPUBLIC OF UZBEKISTAN

Authors

  • Xalilov Saidakbar Muratovich Master’s student, Public Administration Law (70420106)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55640/

Keywords:

inevitability of liability, artificial intelligence, criminal law, inevitability of punishment, digital evidence, identification of perpetrators, criminal procedural law, Uzbekistan.

Abstract

 This article analyzes the principle of the inevitability of liability in the context of crimes involving artificial intelligence (AI). The author examines the essence of this principle and demonstrates the obstacles that AI technologies pose to its implementation: the difficulty of identifying perpetrators, anonymity, transnationality, and challenges in evidence collection. The study proposes legal, procedural, and institutional directions for ensuring the inevitability of liability in the Republic of Uzbekistan. As a conclusion, it substantiates the necessity of comprehensively developing substantive law, criminal procedural mechanisms, and technical capacity to ensure inevitability.

References

1. Beccaria, C. On Crimes and Punishments / trans. — Tashkent: Adolat, 2019.

2. Hallevy, G. When Robots Kill: Artificial Intelligence under Criminal Law. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 2013. — 264 p.

3. King, T. C., Aggarwal, N., Taddeo, M., Floridi, L. Artificial Intelligence Crime: An Interdisciplinary Analysis of Foreseeable Threats and Solutions // Science and Engineering Ethics. — 2020. — Vol. 26, No. 1. — P. 89–120.

4. Gless, S., Silverman, E., Weigend, T. If Robots Cause Harm, Who Is to Blame? Self-Driving Cars and Criminal Liability // New Criminal Law Review. — 2016. — Vol. 19, No. 3. — P. 412–436.

5. Chesney, R., Citron, D. Deep Fakes: A Looming Challenge for Privacy, Democracy, and National Security // California Law Review. — 2019. — Vol. 107, No. 6. — P. 1753–1820.

6. Council of Europe. Convention on Cybercrime (Budapest Convention), ETS No. 185. — Budapest, 2001.

7. Constitution of the Republic of Uzbekistan. — Tashkent, 2023.

8. Criminal Code of the Republic of Uzbekistan. — Tashkent: Adolat, 2024.

9. Code of Criminal Procedure of the Republic of Uzbekistan. — Tashkent: Adolat, 2024.

10. Decree of the President of the Republic of Uzbekistan "On Measures for the Development of Artificial Intelligence Technologies". — Tashkent, 2024.

Downloads

Published

2026-06-04

How to Cite

ENSURING THE INEVITABILITY OF LIABILITY FOR CRIMES RELATED TO ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN THE REPUBLIC OF UZBEKISTAN. (2026). International Journal of Political Sciences and Economics, 5(6), 26-29. https://doi.org/10.55640/

Similar Articles

11-20 of 750

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.