February 27, 2026
Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co. (SAM), has released a comprehensive report titled “Reforming India’s AI Liability Regime: Report on Artificial Intelligence and Legal Responsibility in India”, calling for reforms to India’s legal framework governing liability for harms caused by artificial intelligence (AI) systems.
As AI technologies become increasingly embedded across critical sectors such as healthcare, finance, transportation, and public services, the report underscores that India’s existing liability laws were not designed to address the unique characteristics of AI systems. These include opacity in decision-making, self-learning and adaptive behaviour, and the involvement of multiple actors across the AI value chain.
The report highlights the growing urgency for a modernised liability framework that can respond to the risks posed by AI while continuing to support innovation and adoption.
Key Findings
The report identifies three fundamental gaps in India’s current legal framework:
Comparative Insights
Drawing on comparative analysis of legal frameworks in the European Union, United States, Australia, and Japan, the report identifies international best practices that India could consider adapting:
Principal Recommendations
The report proposes a principled reform agenda for India, including:
Leadership Perspective
Commenting on the report, Dr. Shardul S. Shroff, Executive Chairman, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co., said:
“Artificial intelligence is no longer a future concern—it is already shaping critical decisions across the economy. India’s legal framework must evolve to address the distinctive risks posed by AI systems while continuing to foster innovation. This report seeks to contribute constructively to that evolution by identifying principled, comparative, and implementable pathways for reform.”
Pallavi Shroff, Managing Partner, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co., said:
“AI-driven systems challenge some of the most settled assumptions in liability law—from causation and foreseeability to responsibility across complex value chains. India now has an opportunity to develop a forward-looking framework that protects individuals from harm while providing legal certainty to businesses deploying AI at scale. This report is intended to inform that balance with comparative insight and practical recommendations.”
Akshay Chudasama, Managing Partner, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co., added:
“As AI becomes integral to commercial decision-making and public infrastructure, the absence of a clear liability regime creates risk for all stakeholders—developers, deployers, users, and consumers alike. A principled, control-based approach to liability, supported by procedural safeguards, is essential to ensure accountability without stifling innovation. We hope this report contributes meaningfully to India’s evolving technology governance discourse.”
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