“…Whether advanced robots and AI applications (henceforth, RAI) are, should, and eventually will be considered as “subjects” rather than mere “objects” is a question that has strongly characterized the social, philosophical, and legal debate since Solum’s seminar article on “Legal Personhood for Artificial Intelligence” ( Solum, 1992 ), and arguably even earlier ( Turing, 1950 ; Putman, 1964 ; Nagel, 1974 ; Bunge, 1977 ; Taylor, 1977 ; Searle, 1980 ; Searle, 1984 ; McNally and Inayatullah, 1988 ). However, debates have significantly intensified over the last two decades, with interest in both the scientific and non-academic circles raising every time a new technology rolls out (e.g., autonomous cars being tested in real-life scenarios on our streets), or an outstanding socio-legal development occurs (e.g., the humanoid Sophia receiving Saudi Arabian citizenship) 1 (see, e.g., Allen et al, 2000 ; Allen et al, 2005 ; Teubner, 2006 ; Chrisley, 2008 ; Coeckelbergh, 2010 ; Koops et al, 2010 ; Gunkel, 2012 ; Basl, 2014 ; Balkin, 2015a ; Iannì and Monterossi, 2017 ; Christman, 2018 ; Gunkel, 2018 ; Nyholm, 2018 ; Pagallo, 2018b ; Santoni de Sio and van den Hoven, 2018 ; Lior, 2019 ; Loh, 2019 ; Turner, 2019 ; Wagner, 2019 ; Andreotta, 2021 ; Basl et al, 2020 ; Bennett and Daly, 2020 ; Dignum, 2020 ; Gunkel, 2020 ; Kingwell, 2020 ; Osborne, 2020 ; Powell, 2020 ; Serafimova, 2020 ; Wheeler, 2020 ; De Pagter, 2021 ; Gabriel, 2021 ; Gogoshin, 2021 ; Gordon, 2021 ; Gunkel and Wales, 2021 ; Joshua, 2021 ; Kiršienė et al, 2021 ; Martínez and Winter 2021 ; Schröder, 2021 ; Singer, 2021 ).…”