Mississippi College Law Mandates AI Education
Analysis based on 7 articles · First reported Apr 20, 2026 · Last updated Apr 20, 2026
The mandatory AI education at Mississippi College School of Law signals a growing trend in legal and professional fields to integrate AI ethically and effectively, potentially increasing demand for AI-literate professionals and influencing regulatory developments. This move could also spur further investment in AI infrastructure, as seen with the $60 billion expected for data centers in United States===Mississippi.
Mississippi College School of Law has become one of the first institutions in the nation to mandate AI education for all its students. Dean John Anderson aims to equip future lawyers with the skills to use AI effectively, ethically, and efficiently, avoiding common pitfalls. The intensive two-day course, designed and taught by Oliver Roberts of Wickard AI and The National Law Review, covers widely used tools like Thomson Reuters===Westlaw AI, regulatory environments, and ethical considerations. Students engaged in hands-on projects, creating prototypes for legal apps. This initiative is part of United States===Mississippi College's broader effort, including the Center for AI Policy and Technology Leadership, to lead in AI education and policy. The state of United States===Mississippi is also seeing significant investment in AI infrastructure, with over $60 billion expected for data centers, and legislative efforts, led by Senator Bradford Blackmon, to establish AI usage guardrails.
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