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Legal Technology

Helping the legal profession get AI‑ready: A new advisory board takes shape

· 6 minute read

· 6 minute read

Prestigious panel of legal educators, practitioners, and judges assemble to guide the legal profession's response to the AI-driven transformation of legal education and practice readiness

Key insights:

      • AI is already reshaping the legal profession — AI is already embedded in lawyers’ day-to-day legal work with a significant share of both law firm attorneys and in-house legal teams actively using GenAI tools, with many expecting it to become central to their work within the next five years.

      • AIFLP Advisory Board was formed to prepare lawyers for an AI-reshaped profession — TRI convened 21 respected leaders from legal education, private practice, the judiciary, and AI ethics and governance to help ensure lawyers and law students are prepared for a profession reshaped by AI.

      • Human judgment remains central in an AI enabled legal future — Becoming AI ready is not simply about learning to use new tools; the Advisory Board emphasizes strengthening irreplaceable human capabilities is critical.


In today’s tech-driven environment, AI is no longer a future concept for the legal profession — it’s already here, and it’s changing how lawyers work, learn, and serve clients. Recognizing just how fast the evolution is moving, the Thomson Reuters Institute (TRI) has launched the AI and the Future of Legal Practice (AIFLP) Advisory Board, bringing together a group of respected leaders from across the legal ecosystem to help guide what comes next.

The board includes 21 accomplished voices from legal education, private practice, the judiciary, and AI ethics and governance. Their shared goal is simple but ambitious: Help ensure that both today’s lawyers and tomorrow’s law students are prepared for a profession being reshaped by AI.

Why now?

Because the shift is already underway. According to TRI’s recent 2026 AI in Professional Services Report, 41% of law firm attorneys say their organizations are already using some form of generative AI (GenAI); and nearly half of those at corporate legal departments report that AI tools are being rolled out there too. Even more telling, most professionals said they expect GenAI to become central to their day‑to‑day work within the next five years.

That pace of change raises big questions about competence, ethics, education, risk, and access to justice. And those questions don’t have easy answers.

What the Advisory Board will focus on

The AIFLP Advisory Board is designed to tackle those challenges head‑on. Its work will center on four key areas that are already under pressure as AI adoption accelerates:

      • Legal education and talent development
      • Ethics, professional competence, and accountability
      • Governance, risk management, and client counseling
      • Access to justice and modern service delivery

The Advisory Board’s early focus areas will look at how AI is actually changing legal practice today, what future‑ready lawyers really need to know, and how legal education and real‑world practice can better align. The emphasis is not just on using AI tools, but on strengthening the human skills that matter most, such as sound judgment, critical thinking, and careful verification of AI‑generated outputs.

Shaping the future, not reacting to it

Citing the critical need for this Advisory Board’s creation, Mike Abbott, Head of the Thomson Reuters Institute, notes that the legal profession is at a crossroads, and it can either react to AI‑driven disruption or take an active role in shaping how these technologies are used to support lawyers, courts, and the public.

“By assembling a board of distinguished leaders, our goal is to help practicing lawyers and the lawyers of the future navigate a rapidly evolving landscape,” Abbott said. “Ensuring that legal education strengthens irreplaceable skills such as critical thinking, human judgment and effective communication helps make AI use safe and effective. The Board’s efforts will ultimately help shape a future-ready profession, leading to better outcomes for all.”

Meet the AIFLP Advisory Board Members

By convening experienced leaders from across the profession, TRI hopes to help lawyers navigate this landscape with confidence. Advisory Board Members include:

      • Michael Abbott, Head of the Thomson Reuters Institute
      • Soledad Atienza, Dean, IE Law School
      • The Honorable Jennifer D. Bailey, (Ret.), Partner, Bass Law
      • Benjamin Barros, Dean, Stetson University College of Law
      • Professor Sara J. Berman, University of Southern California, Gould School of Law
      • Megan Carpenter, Dean Emeritus, University of New Hampshire Franklin Pierce School of Law
      • Ronald S. Flagg, President, Legal Services Corporation
      • Donna Haddad, AI Ethics and Governance expert, and founding member, IBM AI Ethics Board
      • Johanna Kalb, Dean and Professor of Law, University of San Francisco School of Law
      • The Honorable Nelly Khouzam, Florida Second District Court of Appeal
      • The Honorable William Koch, Dean, Nashville School of Law, and former Tennessee Supreme Court Justice
      • Sheldon Krantz, retired partner, DLA Piper, and a founder, DC Affordable Law Firm
      • Stefanie A. Lindquist, Dean, School of Law, Washington University in St. Louis
      • The Honorable Mark Martin, Founding Dean and Professor of Law, Kenneth F. Kahn School of Law at High Point University, and former Chief Justice, Supreme Court of North Carolina
      • Caitlin (Cat) Moon, Professor of the Practice and founding co-director, Vanderbilt AI Law Lab, Vanderbilt Law School
      • Hari Osofsky, Myra and James Bradwell Professor and former Dean, Northwestern Pritzker School of Law; Founding Director, Northwestern University Energy Innovation Lab; and Founding Director, Rule of Law Global Academic Partnership
      • Joanna Penn, Chief Transformation Officer, Husch Blackwell
      • The Honorable Morris Silberman, Florida Second District Court of Appeal
      • The Honorable Samuel A. Thumma, Arizona Court of Appeals, Division One
      • Mark Wasserman, Partner and CEO Emeritus, Eversheds Sutherland
      • Donna E. Young, Founding Dean, Lincoln Alexander School of Law, Toronto Metropolitan University

What’s next?

The Advisory Board held its first meeting in February and will meet quarterly going forward. As the work progresses, TRI plans to publish research findings, best practices, and practical recommendations for legal educators, law firms, and courts.

In a profession built on precedent and careful reasoning, the rise of AI presents both opportunity and responsibility. The AIFLP Advisory Board is an effort to make sure the legal community meets that moment thoughtfully and on its own terms.


You can learn more about the impact of advanced technology on the legal profession here

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