Introduction, Gianclaudio Malgieri (Leiden University, the Netherlands), Gloria Gonzalez Fuster (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium), Alessandro Mantelero (Polytechnic University Tourin, Italy), and Gabriela Zanfir-Fortuna (Future of Privacy Forum)
Part I: Key Issues
1. Why the EU AI Act: The Objectives of the Law, Frederik Zuiderveen Borgesius (Radboud University, the Netherlands) and Gianclaudio Malgieri (Leiden University, the Netherlands)
2. The Scope of the AI Act in the Light of the EU's Digital Strategy (Art 2), Marc Rotenberg (CAIDP, USA) and Alessandro Mantelero (Politecnico di Torino, Italy)
3. Defining AI Regulation: Main Actors and Key Notions (Definitions) (Art 3), Gabriela Zanfir-Fortuna (Future of Privacy Forum)
4. The Risk Framework in the AI Act and the Role of the EC (Article 6,7, Annex I, Annex III, Article 50, Art 9), Laura Caroli (Center for Strategic and International Studies, USA) and Paul Nemitz (European Commission, Belgium)
5. The Mixed Nature of the AI Act: Product Safety and Fundamental Rights Regulation, Giovanni De Gregorio (Catolica Global School of Law, Portugal)
Part II: Prohibited Practices
6. The Prohibitions Related to Human Vulnerabilities and Manipulation (Art 5.1.a, 5.1.b), Maria-Lucia Rebrean (Leiden University, the Netherlands), Constanta Rosca (Leiden University, the Netherlands), Lex Zard (Harvard Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, USA)
7. The Prohibitions of Social Scoring (Art 5.1.c), Nathan Genicot (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
8. Prohibition on Predictive Policing (Art. 5.1.d) and Facial Recognition (Art. 5.1.e), Bart Custers (Leiden University, the Netherlands)
9. Prohibition on Emotion Recognition Systems in Education and in the Workplace (Art 5.1.f), Andreas Hauselmann (Open Universiteit, the Netherlands)
10. The Prohibitions Related to Biometric Surveillance and their Exceptions (5.1.e, 5.1.g., 5.1.h., 5.2), Gavin Robinson (Leiden University, the Netherlands)
Part III: High-Risk AI Systems
11. Classification of High-risk AI Systems and its Update (Art 6, 7, 50, 71, Annex I, Annex III), Giorgio Resta (Rome Tre University, Italy)
12. Obligations of Providers of High-Risk AI Systems (Art 8, Article 9, 16, 20, 21, 22), Phil Lee (Digiphile, UK)
13. Deployers: Identification and Obligations (Art 26), Phil Lee (Digiphile, UK)
14. Conformity Assessment, Quality and Risk Management Systems (Art 8, 9, 17, 42, 43, 46), Alessandro Mantelero (Politecnico di Torino, Italy)
15. The FRIA (Art 27), Alessandro Mantelero (Politecnico di Torino, Italy)
16. Data and Data Governance (Art 10), Margo Bernelin (Centre national de la recherche scientifique, France) and Michael Van den Poel (EDHEC Business School, UK)
17. Accountability and Transparency (Art 11, 12, 13, 18, 19, 50), Gabe Maldoff (Goodwin, USA)
18. Human Oversight (Art 14), Melanie Fink (Leiden University, the Netherlands)
19. Accuracy, Robustness, and Cybersecurity (Art 15), Giuseppe Vaciago (Politecnico di Torino, Italy)
20. Identification and Obligations of Importers, Distributors, and Responsibilities Along the AI Value Chain (Art 23, 24, 25), Bart Schermer (Leiden University, the Netherlands)
21. Standards and Common Specification (arts 40, 41), Irene Kamara (Tilburg University, the Netherlands)
22. Certificates, Declaration of Conformity, CE Marking, and Registration (Art 28-39, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49), Max von Grafenstein (University of the Arts in Berlin, Germany)
Part IV: GPAI and General-Purpose AI Models
23. Obligations for General Purpose AI Models (Art 53), Caterina Sganga (Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies of Pisa, Italy)
24. The Rules about Providers of General Purpose AI Models (Art 53, 54, 56, Michael Veale (University College London, UK) and Joao Quintals (University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands)
25. General Purpose AI Models with Systemic Risks. Classification and Specific Obligations (Art 51, 52, 55), Connor Dunlop (Ada Lovelace Institute, UK)
Part V: Measures in Support of Innovation
26. AI Regulatory Sandboxes (Art 57-61), Thiago Guimaraes Moraes (Brazilian Data Protection Authority)
27. SMEs and Derogation (Art 62, 63), Vincenzo Tiani (Future of Privacy Forum, Belgium)
Part VI: Governance
28. EU Level Governance (AI Office, AI Board, Advisory Forum, Scientific Panel) (Art 64 - 69), Claudio Novelli (Yale University, USA)
29. National Level Governance (National Competent Authorities) and Notification Procedures (incl. Arts 30-31 and 28-39) (Art 70), Joanna Mazur (University of Warsaw, Poland)
Part VII: Monitoring and Enforcement
30. Post-market Monitoring (Art 72, 73), Brenda Leong (ZwillGen PLLC, USA)
31. Enforcement (Art 74 - 84, 88 - 94), Luca Tosoni (Schjodt, Norway)
32. The Right to Explanation (Art 86), Margot Kaminski (University of Colorado Law School, USA) and Gianclaudio Malgieri (Leiden University, the Netherlands)
33. Remedies and Penalties (Art 85, 87, 99 - 101), Maria Magierska (Maastricht University, the Netherlands)
Part VIII: Codes of Conducts, Guidelines and AI Literacy
34. Codes of Conduct and EC Guidelines (Art 56, 95-98), Denise Amram (Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Italy)
35. AI Literacy (Art 4), Tommaso Fia (University of Tuebingen, Germany)
Part IX: The AI Act Interactions with the Digital Rulebook
36. Consistency and Interplay with the GDPR, Gloria Gonzalez Fuster (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
37. Consistency and Interplay with the DSA, Joris Hoboken (Universiteit van Amsterdam, the Netherlands)
38. The AI Act, the Proposed AI Liability Directive, and the Product Safety Directive, Gianmarco Gori (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)
39. The Interplay between the AIA and the DMA, Muhammed Demircan (DLA Piper, Belgium) and Florentien Maes (DLA Piper, Belgium)