This work sets out standards for the use of artificial intelligence by advocates across three pillars — ethics, verification, and work management — as a professional-responsibility framework. Resting on the principle that the advocate holds sole substantive authority while AI serves as an instrument, it ties AI-collaboration practice to professional accountability, drawing on Law No. 18 of 2003 on Advocates and the Indonesian Advocates' Code of Ethics. It offers concrete holds for advocates to use AI responsibly without displacing the professional responsibility that attaches to them.
Tandry Laksana (Thu,) studied this question.