04 — AGL · AGENT GOVERNANCE LEGAL

Agent Governance Legal

The conversation about Agent deployment is just beginning to reach legal practice. Third party Agents are already interacting with clients' businesses, or Agents have already been deployed within clients' enterprises, making decisions, executing workflows, and interacting with counterparty systems without the guardrails that would make those actions attributable or legally defensible. Most clients do not yet know what to ask. That will change. The firms that understood the frameworks required for Agent deployment will be the firms that succeed when those questions surface.

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HOW IT WORKS

01 — THE LEGAL ATTRIBUTION BRIEFING

A half-day session for partners and practice group leaders. We cover what the "legal attribution gap" is, why it is a structural property of current Agent infrastructure rather than a temporary compliance gap, and what it means for the clients your firm is already advising.

02 — FOUNDATIONAL LEGAL QUESTIONS

The session provides the technical grounding needed to move the AI conversation into a discussion on the foundational legal questions created by autonomous workflows: liability, authority, attribution, and what happens across an organisational boundary when something goes wrong.

03 — CLIENT POSITIONING

It gives a substantive and legally grounded touchpoint to talk to clients beyond AI hype and based on the existing area of expertise of law firm partners.

Monumental staircase with repeating stone arches and balustrades

THE PRACTICE

When corporations first deployed human workforces the law developed frameworks to attribute liability, allocate rights, and enforce obligations: Employment contracts. Concepts of vicarious liability. Agency law. Corporate governance. These frameworks made large-scale human deployment legally manageable. Agents are the next workforce, though the current frameworks do not consider legal attribution.

Clients are deploying Agents without defined scope, documented authority, or contractual frameworks governing what happens when those Agents interact with counterparties across organisational boundaries. The legal questions that creates are not niche or speculative. They are the questions law firms answer every day - liability, attribution, authority, duty of care - though these questions now must be applied to a class of actor that current frameworks were not built to govern. The firms that understand this now are not waiting for clients to bring the questions. They are bringing the framework to clients before the questions regarding the conduct of Agents result in disputes.



"Legal frameworks governing liability, attribution, and duty of care were designed for a world in which decisions were made by identifiable human actors. Agents change those assumptions. The governance frameworks that exist today are not inadequate at the margins but are structurally misaligned with the environments in which organisations are increasingly operating."

— Partner, Global Litigation Practice

CASE STUDY

ILLUSTRATIVE · LAW FIRM · 2026

A large firm with a significant financial services and infrastructure client base convenes a Legal Attribution Briefing for its corporate, disputes, and technology practice group leaders.

The session is not driven by client queries. It is driven by the recognition that Agents are being deployed in the client base, and that the firm has no systematic framework for the legal questions created by the deployment of Agents by its clients. It gives a substantive and legally grounded touchpoint to talk to clients beyond AI hype and based on the existing area of expertise of law firm partners.

Following the briefing, the firm convenes a joint session with anchor clients from its financial services and energy portfolios. The clients leave with a clear understanding of their governance exposure. The firm leaves with active mandates scoped around Agent governance and a practice positioning that competitors have not yet established.

INDICATIVE OUTCOME

Practice group upskilled and anchor client conversations initiated

INDICATIVE TIMELINE

Half-day briefing followed by joint client session within four to six weeks

SCOPE

Legal Attribution Briefing, joint client session, governance framework positioning


CONTACT

If your firm is not yet receiving questions about Agent deployment, that is not evidence the issue does not exist. It is evidence that your clients do not yet know what to ask, or because of an assumption that law firms are not equipped to address the issue. This is the conversation worth having before they find out another way.

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