Computable Models of the Law: Languages, Dialogues, Games, Ontologies

Portada
Giovanni Sartor, Núria Casellas, Rossella Rubino
Springer, 2 oct 2008 - 344 páginas

Information technology has now pervaded the legal sector, and the very modern concepts of e-law and e-justice show that automation processes are ubiquitous. European policies on transparency and information society, in particular, require the use of technology and its steady improvement.

Some of the revised papers presented in this book originate from a workshop held at the European University Institute of Florence, Italy, in December 2006. The workshop was devoted to the discussion of the different ways of understanding and explaining contemporary law, for the purpose of building computable models of it -- especially models enabling the development of computer applications for the legal domain. During the course of the following year, several new contributions, provided by a number of ongoing (or recently finished) European projects on computation and law, were received, discussed and reviewed to complete the survey.

This book presents 20 thoroughly refereed revised papers on the hot topics under research in different EU projects: legislative XML, legal ontologies, semantic web, search and meta-search engines, web services, system architecture, dialectic systems, dialogue games, multi-agent systems (MAS), legal argumentation, legal reasoning, e-justice, and online dispute resolution. The papers are organized in topical sections on knowledge representation, ontologies and XML legislative drafting; knowledge representation, legal ontologies and information retrieval; argumentation and legal reasoning; normative and multi-agent systems; and online dispute resolution.

 

Índice

State of the Art and Trends in European Research
1
MetaLex XML and the Legal Knowledge Interchange Format
21
Regulation Drafting Meets the Semantic Web
42
The DALOS Project
56
An Ontology for Identifying Legal Resources
71
An Ontology for Spatial Regulations
86
Supporting the Construction of Spanish Legal Ontologies with Text2Onto
105
Dynamic Aspects of OPJK Legal Ontology
113
Computing Argumentation for Decision Making in Legal Disputes
203
Deterrence and Defeasibility in Argumentation Process for ALIS Project
219
An Analytical Approach
239
Rulebase Technology and Legal Knowledge Representation
254
Source Norms and Selfregulated Institutions
263
Ostracism in Open MultiAgent Systems
275
Preliminary Results of the BESTProject
291
ICTSupported Dispute Resolution
312

Improvements in Recall and Precision in WoltersKluwer Spain Legal Search Engine
130
Three Senses of Argument
146
Constructing Legal Arguments with Rules in the Legal Knowledge Interchange Format LKIF
162
AssumptionBased Argumentation for Epistemic and Practical Reasoning
185
Concepts and Fields of Relational Justice
323
Author Index
340
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