No More Legal Writing in Contracts—Time to Break the Magic Spell!

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Huom! Tiedosto avautuu julkiseksi: 23.11.2027

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©2025 Springer. This is an Author Accepted Manuscript version of the following chapter: Haapio, Helena, No More Legal Writing in Contracts—Time to Break the Magic Spell!, published in Generative AI, Contracts, Law and Design, edited by M. Corrales Compagnucci, H. Haapio, & M. Fenwick, 2025, Springer Singapore reproduced with permission of Springer. The final authenticated version is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-95-2058-9_2. Users may only view, print, copy, download and text- and data-mine the content, for the purposes of academic research. The content may not be (re-)published verbatim in whole or in part or used for commercial purposes. Users must ensure that the author’s moral rights as well as any third parties’ rights to the content or parts of the content are not compromised.
The business world and the legal profession are undergoing a historic transformation. Traditional approaches to contracting and lawyering are being challenged, accelerated by the rise of generative AI (GenAI), and the spread of design-led thinking. These changes are reshaping the very nature—and legitimacy—of legal writing, particularly in the context of contracts. For decades, contracts have been treated as formal legal documents written by lawyers for other lawyers. Their structure, tone, and language have remained remarkably consistent over time, often reflecting inherited drafting conventions rather than the needs of the people who use them. If the purpose of contracts is to set and reach common goals, why does their language so often feel mysterious, like a kind of magic spell? This chapter begins by taking this question seriously. It explores how traditional legal writing has functioned as a form of inherited linguistic power, a dark legacy. Yet that spell and legacy have begun to break with the rise of visual and redesigned contracts, plain language, and the increasing integration of GenAI. These developments do more than make contracts easier to read; they challenge long-standing assumptions about what and who contracts are for, and how they can work. If we can move beyond legal writing as usual, we can begin to see contracts not as formal legal documents, but as tools for understanding and action. “No more legal writing in contracts” is more than a slogan. It is a call to reimagine how contracts are communicated, how legal professionals work, and how legal knowledge is shared and applied. It is also a call for lawyers to rethink their role—not only as firefighters or interpreters and guardians of rules, but as proactive solution providers and strategic enablers: partners in designing and building a better future.

Emojulkaisu

Generative AI, Contracts, Law and Design

ISBN

978-981-95-2058-9

ISSN

2520-1883
2520-1875

Aihealue

Kausijulkaisu

Perspectives in Law, Business and Innovation | Active

OKM-julkaisutyyppi

A3 Book chapter (peer-reviewed)
A3 Kirjan tai muun kokoomateoksen osa (vertaisarvioitu)