Law Commission issues paper on remote driving
The Law Commission for England and Wales invites responses to its remote driving issues paper published on 24 June 2022. The Law Commission is considering the law surrounding remote driving, where a person outside a vehicle uses wireless connectivity to control a vehicle on a public road. The Centre for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles (CCAV) and the Department for Transport have asked us to clarify the current legal status of remote driving and consider whether reforms are needed. For more information about this project, click here We recommend reading the remote driving issues paper before submitting a response. A shorter summary is also available. Respondees do not need to answer all the questions if they are only interested in some aspects of the paper. About the Law Commission: The Law Commission is a statutory body, created by th
Law Commission issues paper on remote driving
- Ministry of Justice
- Citizen Space
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Law Commission issues paper on remote driving
Overview
The Law Commission for England and Wales invites responses to its remote driving issues paper published on 24 June 2022.
The Law Commission is considering the law surrounding remote driving, where a person outside a vehicle uses wireless connectivity to control a vehicle on a public road. The Centre for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles (CCAV) and the Department for Transport have asked us to clarify the current legal status of remote driving and consider whether reforms are needed.
For more information about this project, click
here
We recommend reading the remote driving
issues paper
before submitting a response. A
shorter summary
is also available. Respondees do not need to answer all the questions if they are only interested in some aspects of the paper.
About the Law CommissionThe Law Commission is a statutory body, created by the Law Commissions Act 1965 (“the 1965 Act”) for the purpose of promoting the reform of the law. It is an advisory Non Departmental Public Body sponsored by the Ministry of Justice (MoJ). The Law Commission is independent of Government. For more information about the Law Commission please
click here
.
Responses to this issues paperWe may publish or disclose information you provide us in response to this issues paper, including personal information. For more information on how we consult and how we may use responses to the issues paper, please see page ii of the paper. For information about how we handle your personal data, please see our
privacy notice
.
Closed
9 Sep 2022
Opened
24 Jun 2022
Contact
020 3334 0200
public@lawcommission.gov.uk
Audiences
Business & industry
Citizens
Government departments
Judiciary
Legal professionals
Police and law enforcement professionals
Voluntary organisations
Interests
Compensation
Courts
Damages
Data protection
Law
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