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LN2FR 2022 : Workshop on Methodologies for Translating Legal Norms into Formal Representations | |||||||||||||
Link: https://jurix2022.rechtsinformatik.saarland/session/ln2fr-methodologies-for-translating-legal-norms-into-formal-representations-full-day/ | |||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||
LN2FR 2022: Workshop on Methodologies for Translating Legal Norms into
Formal Representations in conjunction with JURIX 2022, the 35th International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems. Workshop date: December 14th, 2022, Saarbrücken, Germany (the workshop will likely be conducted as a hybrid event). Deadline for submission: November 3th, 2022. Motivation ----------------- Using symbolic logic or similar methods of knowledge representation to formalise legal norms is one of the most traditional goals of legal informatics as a scientific discipline. More than mere theoretical value, this approach is also connected to promising real-world applications involving, e.g., the observance of legal norms by highly automated machines or even the (partial) automatisation of legal reasoning, leading to new automated legal services. Albeit the long research tradition on the use of logic to formalise legal norms – be it by using classic logic systems (e.g., first-order logic), be it by attempting to construct a specific system of logic of norms (e.g., deontic logic) –, many challenges involved in the development of an adequate methodology for the formalisation of concrete legal regulations remain unsolved. This includes not only the choice of a sufficiently expressive formal language or model, but also the concrete way through which a legal text formulated in natural language is to be translated into the formal representation. The workshop LN2FR seeks to explore the various challenges connected with the task of using formal languages and models to represent legal norms in a machine-readable manner. Topics ----------------- LN2FR seeks to discuss current research questions concerning (among others): - Knowledge representation methods applicable to legal norms (especially traffic rules), including different types of (deontic) logic or comparable formalisms - Formalisation of rule-exceptions, rule-conflicts and/or contrary-to-duty obligations - Formalisation of abstract legal concepts and basic principles of law (e.g., “human dignity”, “mutual respect”, “care”, “danger”, “trust”) - Models and approaches to the practical implementation of law-formalisations (e.g., (legal) ontologies, LegalRuleML, PROLEG, reasoning engines, SAT-solvers) - Models and approaches – including automated methods – to adequately ‘translate’ legal provisions (especially traffic rules) from natural language to a formal symbolism - Legal and/or engineering challenges arising from the use of formal representation methods to formalise legal norms (especially traffic rules) Scope ----------------- The workshop aims to attract participants from various disciplines, particularly from Computer Science, Law and Philosophy, and to be of interest to anyone working on the application of knowledge representation methods to the field of law. Participation and Submission --------------------------------------------------- People interested in participating are invited to submit short (5-9 pages) or long papers (10-14 pages) in PDF before November 3rd 2022 via easychair: https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=ln2fr. Please use the Springer LNCS format style to prepare your submission. Authors of the accepted papers will present at the workshop (remote participation will likely be possible). The publication of the accepted papers (workshop–proceedings) is intended. Organizers ----------- Georg Borges (Saarland University, Germany) Ken Satoh (National Institute of Informatics, Japan) Erich Schweighofer (Univeristy of Vienna, Austria) |
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