Dr Stefano Faraoni

Dr Stefano Faraoni

Birmingham Law School
Teaching Fellow in Law

Contact details

Address
Birmingham Law School
University of Birmingham
Edgbaston
Birmingham
B15 2TT
UK

Dr Stefano Faraoni is a Teaching Fellow in Law at Birmingham Law School with international experience as a practising lawyer and a Turin Bar AI Commission member. His interdisciplinary research investigates the legal aspects of Artificial Intelligence and new technologies.

Qualifications

  • PhD in Law, University of York, 2024
  • Member of The Turin Bar Artificial Intelligence Commission since 2021
  • Qualification as Mediator in Civil and Commercial Matters (ADR), 2011
  • Avvocato, Member of the Turin Bar since 2006 (Avvocato Cassazionista since 2020)
  • Degree in Law (magna cum laude), University of Turin, 2002

Biography

Dr Stefano Faraoni joined the University of Birmingham in 2024 as a Teaching Fellow in Law.

He graduated magna cum laude from the University of Turin and was awarded a PhD in Law by the University of York.

He has been a practising lawyer (Avvocato) registered with the Turin Bar since 2006. He practised in Private and Criminal law and later specialised in International Contract Law, focusing on technology. He is a Turin Bar Commission on Artificial Intelligence member.

In 2018, he joined the University of Turin, Italy, as an Associate Lecturer, investigating and teaching legal categories and the use of language in Common Law and Civil Law systems in areas such as Contract Law, Criminal Law, and International Law. He held courses on negotiation and communication skills.

In 2021, he joined the University of York as a Post Graduate Researcher, investigating the interaction between AI and the law. His PhD focused on how contract law should regulate Manipulative Persuasive Technology led by Artificial Intelligence, using the English and Italian systems as case studies. His research investigates from a Contract Law perspective Persuasive Technology, Dark Patterns, Hypernudges and Computational Manipulation, their use and functioning, and their impact on the psychological processes of individuals, on consent and on the right to self-determine their thoughts (a possible new neuro-right to mental self-determination).

In his post-doctoral experience as a Research Associate at the University of York, in an interdisciplinary project in collaboration with the Alan Turing Institute, he investigated the legal aspects connected to the use of Digital Twins in areas such as Intellectual Property, Ownership, Cybersecurity, Data Protection, Liability in Tort Law and Contract Law, Explainability and individual's rights. 

Teaching

  • Intellectual Property
  • Legal Foundations of the European Union
  • Legal Skills and Method
  • Legal Solutions
  • Skills Academy

Research

Stefano's research interests focus on the interaction between technology and existing doctrines and legislation, with an international, comparative and interdisciplinary approach, with specific focus on:

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Persuasive Technologies and Captology
  • Computational Manipulation
  • Hypernudge
  • Dark Patterns
  • Digital Twins
  • Consent
  • Neuro Rights and Mental Self-Determination
  • Contract Law
  • Liability
  • IP
  • Data Protection