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Approaches to legal ontologies constitutes a collective reflection
on the foundations of legal ontology engineering, by exploring
current methodologies and theoretical approaches to defining legal
ontologies, their divergences and complementarity and the
challenges still to be faced. It gathers contributions from leading
experts regarding their theoretical commitments and methodological
approaches derived from a long experience in the area and presents
a mature reflection on achievements and current shortcomings. The
various authors reconstruct their concrete methodological
frameworks by retrieving the more or less explicit theoretical
choices that have guided their work on legal ontology engineering
over the last years. This results in the presentation of apparently
opposed but in fact complementary rationales for ontology building
in the legal domain (legal-theoretical, sociolegal, philosophical,
among others) that address the various dimensions of legal
knowledge and its conceptual modelling. The book provides the
reader with a unique source regarding the current theoretical
landscape in legal ontology engineering as well as on foreseeable
future trends for the definition of conceptual structures to
enhance the automatic processing and retrieval of legal information
in the Semantic Web framework. It will thus interest researchers in
the domains of the SW, legal informatics, Artificial Intelligence
and law, legal theory and legal philosophy, as well as developers
of e-government applications based on the intelligent management of
legal or public information to provide both back-office and
front-office support.
Approaches to legal ontologies constitutes a collective reflection
on the foundations of legal ontology engineering, by exploring
current methodologies and theoretical approaches to defining legal
ontologies, their divergences and complementarity and the
challenges still to be faced. It gathers contributions from leading
experts regarding their theoretical commitments and methodological
approaches derived from a long experience in the area and presents
a mature reflection on achievements and current shortcomings. The
various authors reconstruct their concrete methodological
frameworks by retrieving the more or less explicit theoretical
choices that have guided their work on legal ontology engineering
over the last years. This results in the presentation of apparently
opposed but in fact complementary rationales for ontology building
in the legal domain (legal-theoretical, sociolegal, philosophical,
among others) that address the various dimensions of legal
knowledge and its conceptual modelling. The book provides the
reader with a unique source regarding the current theoretical
landscape in legal ontology engineering as well as on foreseeable
future trends for the definition of conceptual structures to
enhance the automatic processing and retrieval of legal information
in the Semantic Web framework. It will thus interest researchers in
the domains of the SW, legal informatics, Artificial Intelligence
and law, legal theory and legal philosophy, as well as developers
of e-government applications based on the intelligent management of
legal or public information to provide both back-office and
front-office support.
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