For the first time in the UAE, the United Arab Emirates iends to use artificial ielligence to write new rules and review existing laws.
According to the Financial Times, artificial ielligence researchers say the UAE’s new design called “Artificial Ielligence Based Regulations” is beyond any other similar project.
Other governmes also try to use artificial ielligence to make things more efficie, such as summarizing bill and improving public services, but the UAE was to go one step further and use this technology to change curre laws with the help of governme and legal data analysis.
“This new legislative system, with the support of artificial ielligence, changes how the rules are set up and makes the process faster and more accurate,” says Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum.
Writing the rules with artificial ielligence in the UAE
“The United Arab Emirates is very serious about artificial ielligence,” says Abdul Khaliq Abdullah, an UAE political affairs expert. “It was to be the World Ceer for Artificial Ielligence and Digital Economics, as it is a global financial and logistics ceer.”

According to him, the coury is investing extensively in digital infrastructure to be ahead of the next 50 years, as it has invested in its physical infrastructure over the past 50 years. It estimates that by 2030 the global market value of artificial ielligence will be $ 15 trillion and $ 700 million; Thus, the UAE GDP increases by 35 perce and governme spending decreases by 50 %.
In 2017, the UAE appoied the world’s first artificial ielligence, Omar Sultan al -Alma. It now was to use this technology in the legislation process. Instead of the traditional parliameary model, where the laws are complicated in political debate over the years, the new approach will be faster, clearer and based on resolving real problems.
Artificial ielligence can analyze the rulings of courts, ideify problems, and write laws that fill legal gaps. It can also read the best rules from all over the world and provide better versions to the UAE. According to experts, it is importa for a coury with only 10 % of its population to be transpare for a population of 200 differe nationalities.



