Posts mit dem Label Legal informatics werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label Legal informatics werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

Samstag, 2. Juni 2012

Call for Papers: Jurix 2012

The 25th International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems
University of Amsterdam,  The Netherlands, 17-19th December 2012

http://conference.jurix.nl/2012

198px-BicyclistAmsterdamCelebrating 25 years of supporting and enhancing cutting edge research in the interface between law and computer technology, the 2012   JURIX
conference  will return to its roots in  Amsterdam.  We invite submission of original papers on the advanced management of legal
information and knowledge, covering foundations, methods, tools, systems and applications for the following (non-exhaustive) list of topics:

  • Support for lawyers, in legal reasoning, document drafting, negotiation;
  • Support for the production and management of legislation, in agendasetting, policy analysis, drafting, workflow management, monitoring implementation;
  • Support for the judiciary, in application of the law, analysis of evidence, management of cases;
  • Support for police activities, in forensic inquiries, search and evaluation of evidence, management of investigations;
  • Support for public administration, in applying regulations and managing information;
  • Support for the acquisition, management or use of legal knowledge, using rules, cases, neural networks, intelligent agents or other methods;
  • Systems and methods to support policies and legal issues for social networks;
  • Retrieval of legal information;
  • Legal education;
  • Digital-rights management;
  • Alternative dispute resolution, particularly on-line;
  • Regulatory compliance and compliance of business processes;
  • Theoretical foundations for the use of Artificial Intelligence techniques in the legal domain;
  • Models of legal knowledge, including concepts (legal ontologies), rules, cases, principles, values and procedures;
  • Legal inference and argumentation;
  • Verification and validation of legal knowledge systems;
  • Management of legal information in the semantic web;
  • XML standards for legal documents, including legislative, judicial, administrative acts as well as private documents, such as contracts;
  • Modelling the legal interactions of autonomous agents and digital institutions;
  • Methods for managing organizational change when introducing legal knowledge systems;
  • Evaluation of systems using advanced informatics techniques in legal applications;
  • Interdisciplinary applications of legal informatics methods and systems.

The deadline for paper submission is 1 September  2012. Papers should be submitted through the EasyChair Conference Management System,

https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=jurix2012

using PDF or Word format, and should not exceed 10 pages when formatted using the styles and guidelines in the Instructions for Authors. Author instructions and style sheets can be found at the IOS Press site under “Book Publishing” in the

“Authors’ Corner”. Authors are strongly encouraged to use these style sheets, as papers not meeting the publisher’s criteria or exceeding the page limit will be excluded from inclusion in the proceedings.

The conference proceedings will be published by IOS Press (Amsterdam, Berlin, Oxford, Tokyo, Washington DC) in their series “Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications” before the Conference Proposals for tutorials and workshops

are invited and strongly encouraged. All proposals, including a short description of the topic, should be sent to the Programme Chair by email. There will also be a possibility to publish selected workshop papers with a range of peer

reviewed journals, including SCRIPTed

using PDF or Word format, and should not exceed 10 pages when formatted using the styles and guidelines in the Instructions for Authors. Author instructions and style sheets can be found at theIOS Press site under “Book Publishing” in the “Authors’ Corner”. Authors are strongly encouraged to use these style sheets, as papers not meeting the publisher’s criteria or exceeding the page limit will be excluded from inclusion in the proceedings.

The conference proceedings will be published by IOS Press (Amsterdam, Berlin, Oxford, Tokyo, Washington DC) in their series “Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence and Applications” before the Conference.

Proposals for tutorials and workshops are invited and strongly encouraged. All proposals, including a short description of the topic, should be sent to the Programme Chair by email. There will also be a possibility to publish selected workshop papers with a range of peer reviewed journals, including SCRIPTed

Programme Chair:
Burkhard Schafer,
SCRIPT Centre for IT and IP Law
University of Edinburgh,  UK.
b.schafer@ed.ac.uk
Local Organisation Chair:
Tom van Engers, Leibniz Center for Law
Faculteit der Rechtsgeleerdheid/Faculty of Law
Universiteit van Amsterdam
vanEngers@uva.nl
Conference website:
http://conference.jurix.nl/2012/cfp.html
Important Dates:

  • Deadline for submissions of papers: 1. September 2012
  • Notification of acceptance: 30th September
  • Final, camera-ready copies required by: 5th October 2012
  • Deadline for proposals for workshops and tutorials: 15. September
  • Conference: main conference 17-18th  December, workshops 19th December

JURIX conferences are held under the auspices of the Dutch Foundation for Legal Knowledge Systems.
Contacts
You can contact us by sending an email to
Burkhard Schafer, B.schafer@ed.ac.uk

Bild stammt von Massimo Catarinella und zeigt einen Radfahrer in Amsterdam

Samstag, 9. Juli 2011

FTRI 2011 – Workshop Legal Informatics 2011

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Recht und InformatikGesellschaft für Informatik

FTRI 2011 – Workshop Legal Informatics 2011 – Legal Information & Advanced Applications in Law

Wednesday 14 December 2011, University of Vienna
Organised within JURIX 2011, 14-16 December 2011, University of Vienna

Call for Papers

The Workshop Legal Informatics (FTRI) aims to promote a pioneering dialogue between science and practice on technical questions of law in the knowledge society. At the international level, the conferences ICAIL and JURIX exist for many years as platforms for the presentation of scientific results on information systems and applications in AI & law. This FTRI – which takes place before the JURIX conference – should support and strengthen the cooperation between the German and the JURIX groups on AI & law research.

The digitalization and computerization of working places of lawyers is moving on. In technology-friendly law firms already up to 7% of the costs are caused by IT & legal information. This reflects the importance of IT in the legal environment. The supply of information is ensured by external and internal, free or pay information systems. The abundance of materials requires the improvement of searching as well as the ranking of search results. Semantic structuring, starting with electronic filing, is becoming the standard. This paves the way for the use of support systems that do more and more certain activities independently. Therefore, the next phase of the computerization of law is before the doors: IT should not only support the delivery of legal services, but also – semi-automatically or automatically – provide legal services itself. In the current transitional phase, the collaboration of man and machine is a decisive factor. The FTRI should show the state of the art and identify the lines of development.

Contributions are welcome on the following topics:

  • Legal information
  • Electronic data collection and analysis
  • Modern search technologies, access to information, “Google” of law
  • Analysis of existing legal information systems
  • Methods of search support (search suggestions, automated improvements, etc.)
  • Ranking according to structures, content, time, importance, etc.
  • Semantic legal information systems
  • “question answering” systems
  • Semantic Mark-up vs. structured information retrieval
  • XML standards for legal documents
  • Advanced informatics systems in law
  • Knowledge representation in the law: assistance for the acquisition, management and use of legal knowledge by means of legal ontologies, semantic web, computer-supported formal methods in law, intelligent agents, etc.
  • Support for attorneys in the drafting of documents, negotiations, legal reasoning, support for legislation and policy development, support for the judiciary (and management) in the application of the law, the analysis of evidence, case management, support for the security police, forensic investigations, etc.
  • Legal reasoning and legal argumentation, alternative dispute resolution (especially online), etc.
  • Advanced software packages in the law firm or notary

Deadlines

  • Deadline for submissions for review: 30 September 2011
  • Deadline for abstracts / practice presentations of about 1-2 pages (without contribution to the proceedings): 15 October 2011
  • Notification of acceptance: 25 October 2011
  • Submission of camera ready papers for the electronic proceedings: 15 November 2011. Submissions should be uploaded exclusively via the conference management system.

Guidelines for submissions from academia and practice

The contributions of the conference will be published electronically in the journal Jusletter IT (http://jusletter-it.eu). The length of the contributions is limited to 4 (short papers), or 8 pages. Abstracts will be included in the summary of the workshop. We request that only the style sheets available on the website are used for writing the papers.

Conference organizers

Prof. Dr. Dr. Erich Schweighofer (spokesman of the Legal Informatics Group of the German Society for Informatics GI) , University of Vienna
Prof. Dr. Andreas Wiebe (German Society for Law and Informatics), University of Göttingen
Prof. Dr. Thomas Gordon (Deputy Speaker of the GI group on legal and administrative informatics)), Fraunhofer FOKUS, Berlin

Organizer

GI German Society for Informatics, Group on Legal Informatics

In co-operation with: – DGRI German Society for Law and Informatics – OCG Working Group on legal Informatics – Centre for Legal Informatics, Faculty of Law, University of Vienna

Participation fees

  • Participants: 100 Euros
  • OCG / GI / DGRI members: 80 Euros
  • Authors / presenters: 80 Euros
  • Members of the Programme Committee: 80 Euros
  • PhD students upon presentation of a subscription: 50 Euros

Programmkomitee (Preliminary)

  • Dr. Pascale Berteloot, Amt für Veröffentlichungen, Luxembourg
  • Prof. Dr. Walter Blocher, Universität Kassel
  • Dr. Colette R. Brunschwig, Universität Zürich
  • Mag. Anton Geist, Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien
  • Prof. Dr. Herbert Fiedler, Uni Bonn
  • Prof. Dr. Thomas Gordon, Fraunhofer FOKUS
  • Matthias Grabmair, University of Pittsburgh
  • Prof. Dr. Dirk Heckmann, Universität Passau
  • Prof. Dr. Thomas Hoeren, Universität Münster
  • Prof. Dr. Sayeed Klewitz-Hommelsen, Hochschule Bonn-Rhein-Sieg
  • Doz. Dr. Ralph Knackstedt, Universität Münster
  • Mag. Peter Kustor, Bundeskanzleramt Wien
  • Direktor Franz Kummer, Weblaw
  • Prof. Dr. Friedrich Lachmayer, Universität Innsbruck
  • Dr. Doris Liebwald
  • Prof. Dr. Dagmar Lück-Schneider, Hochschule für Wirtschaft und Recht
  • Prof. Dr. Alexander Prosser, Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien
  • Prof. Dr. Dr. Gerald Quirchmayr, Universität Wien
  • Prof. Dr. Reinhard Riedl, FH Bern
  • Prof. Dr. Alexander Roßnagel, Universität Kassel
  • Prof. Dr. Burkhard Schafer, Edinburgh University, UK
  • Dr. Günther Schefbeck, Parlament Wien
  • Dr. Martin Schneider, Justizministerium, Wien
  • Prof. Dr. Dr. Erich Schweighofer, Universität Wien
  • Prof. DI Mag. Dr. Michael Sonntag, Universität Linz
  • Prof. Dr. Gerald Spindler, Universität Göttingen
  • Prof. Dr. Jürgen Taeger, Universität Oldenburg
  • Prof. Dr. Roland Traunmüller, Universität Linz
  • Prof. Dr. Andreas Wiebe, Universität Göttingen
  • Prof. Dr. Maria A. Wimmer, Universität Koblenz-Landau

German / Deutsch – Bitte um Beiträge / Call for Papers

Sonntag, 20. Februar 2011

ICAIL 2011 – Workshops and Tutorials

13th International Conference on
Artificial Intelligence & Law (ICAIL 2011)
June 6 - June 10, 2011
University of Pittsburgh School of Law
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
http://www.law.pitt.edu/icail2011
Workshops and Tutorials

The ICAIL 2011 organizers are pleased to report that the conference will include six workshops and two tutorials.  They are listed below, along with the tentative schedule,  the names of the organizers, and the web sites where fuller descriptions and calls for workshop papers can be found.
All workshop and tutorial participants will be expected to register for ICAIL 2011.  For those not wishing to attend the full conference, a one-day registration rate will be available.  Registration for the full conference will include the workshops and tutorials at no extra charge.  We will send another mailing when registration opens, probably in early April.
Monday, June 6, 2011

WM1. E-discovery: Standards-Setting Workshop  (DESI IV) (full day workshop)
http://www.umiacs.umd.edu/~oard/desi4/
Deadlines:  research papers April 1; position papers April 22
        Jason R. Baron, National Archives and Records Administration, USA
        Laura Ellsworth, Jones Day, USA
        Dave Lewis, David D. Lewis Consulting, USA
        Debra Logan, Gartner Research, UK
        Douglas W. Oard, University of Maryland, USA

WM2. Agent Model-Based Reasoning in Law (Monday afternoon workshop)
http://www.leibnizcenter.org/2011-workshop-on-agent-model-based-reasoning-in-law
Deadline:  March 14 (tentative)
        Alexander Boer, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
        Giovanni Sartor, European University Institute and University of Bologna, Italy
        Guido Boella, University of Turino, Italy

WM3. Computational Law: a Bridge towards Business Rules (full day workshop)
http://decibel.cirsfid.unibo.it/icail2011-workshop/
Deadline:  April 20
        Monica Palmirani, University of Bologna, Italy
        Michael Genesereth, Stanford University, USA
        Guido Governatori, NICTA Queensland Research Laboratory, Australia

TM1. Textual Information Extraction from Legal Resources Using GATE (Monday morning tutorial)
http://wyner.info/LanguageLogicLawSoftware/index.php/2011/02/19/textual-information-extraction-from-legal-resources-using-gate/
        Adam Wyner, University of Liverpool, UK
Friday, June 10, 2011

WF1. AI & Evidential Inference (full day workshop)
http://tillers.net/ai/workshop2011.html
        Henry Prakken, University of Groningen and University of Utrecht, Netherlands
        Giovanni Sartor, European University Institute and University of Bologna, Italy
        Doug Walton, University of Windsor, Canada
        Peter Tillers, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, USA

WF2. Legal Applications of Human Language Technology (full day workshop)
http://wyner.info/LanguageLogicLawSoftware/index.php/2011/01/29/icail-workshop-applying-human-language-technology-to-the-law/
Deadline: March 31
        Karl Branting, The MITRE Corporation, USA
        Adam Wyner, University of Liverpool, UK

WF3. Artificial Intelligence, Coherence and Judicial Reasoning (Friday morning workshop)
http://coherence2011.wordpress.com/
Deadline:  abstracts April 15; papers tba
        Michal Araszkiewicz, Jagiellonian University,Poland
        Jaromir Savelka, Masaryk University, Czech Republic

TF1. LegalRuleML (Friday morning tutorial)
http://decibel.cirsfid.unibo.it/icail2011-workshop/
        Harold Boley, University of New Brunswick, Canada
        Monica Palmirani, University of Bologna, Italy
        Antonino Rotolo, University of Bologna, Italy
        Adrian Paschke, Free University Berlin, Germany
        Guido Governatori, NICTA Queensland Research Laboratory, Australia

Samstag, 22. Januar 2011

TAFA 2011@IJCAI – CALL FOR PAPERS

CALL FOR PAPERS
TAFA 2011@IJCAI
First International Workshop on the Theory and Applications of Formal Argumentation
(TAFA-2011) 
Barcelona, Spain, 16 July 2011
http://www.csd.abdn.ac.uk/~niroren/TAFA-11/Welcome.html
About TAFA 2011

--------------------------
Recent years have witnessed a rapid growth of interest in formal models of argumentation and their application in diverse sub-fields and domains of application of AI. Argumentation thus shows great promise as a theoretically-grounded tool for a wide range of applications. This workshop aims at contributing to the realisation of this promise, by promoting and fostering uptake of argumentation as a viable AI paradigm with wide ranging application, and providing a forum for further development of ideas and the initiation of new and innovative collaborations. TAFA therefore encourages submission of papers on formal theoretical models of argumentation and application of such models in (sub-fields of) AI, and evaluation of models, both theoretical (in terms of formal properties) and practical (in concretely developed applications). We also particularly encourage work on theories and applications developed through inter-disciplinary collaborations. 
With the above aims and intended impact in mind, the workshop will include an extended panel session inviting leading researchers in argumentation and in sub-fields of AI in which argumentation has been applied. The panel session will address the topic: `The future of argumentation: what is its added value and how we communicate this to researchers in the Artificial Intelligence community and beyond.'
Topics
------
The workshop solicits papers dealing with, but not limited to, the following topics:
* Properties of formal models of argumentation
* Instantiations of abstract argumentation frameworks
* Relationships amongst different argumentation frameworks
* Argumentation and other Artificial Intelligence techniques
* Evaluation of formal models of argumentation
* Validation and evaluation of applications of argumentation
Submission Guidelines
---------------------
Submission to the workshop will take place via the EasyChair system, and will be anonymously reviewed. Contributors must submit papers (no longer than 15 pages) in the Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science (style). Formatting instructions, as well as the style and sample files can be found here: 
http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=tafa11
Publications
------------
Accepted papers will be published in Springer LNAI post-proceedings 
Important Dates
---------------
14 March 2011: Submission Deadline
25 April 2011: Notifications of Acceptance
16 May 2011: Camera Ready Copy Due
16/17/18  July 2011: Workshop
Organising Committee
-----------------
Co-Chairs:
   * Sanjay Modgil (Corresponding Organiser)
     Department of Informatics,
     King’s College London
     sanjay.modgil [at] kcl.ac.uk
   * Nir Oren
      Department of Computer Science,
      University of Aberdeen
      n.oren [at] abdn.ac.uk
   * Francesca Toni
     Department of Computing, 
     Imperial College London
     ft [at] imperial.ac.uk
Program Committee
-----------------
Leila Amgoud, IRIT, Toulouse, France
Katie Atkinson, University of Liverpool, UK
Pietro Baroni, University of Brescia, Italy
Floris Bex, University of Dundee, UK
Elizabeth Black, Universiy of Utrecht, Netherlands
Guido Boella, Universita di Torino, Italy
Ivan Bratko, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
Gerhard Brewka, University of Leipzig, Germany
Martin Caminada, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Carlos Chesnevar, Universidad Nacional del Sur, Argentina
Sylvie Doutre, University of Toulouse 1, France
Phan Minh Dung, Asian Institute of Technology, Thailand
Paul Dunne, University of Liverpool, UK
Dov Gabbay, King’s College London, UK
Massimilliano Giacomin, University of Brescia, Italy
Tom Gordon, Fraunhofer FOKUS, Germany
Anthony Hunter, Univeristy College London, UK
Antonis Kakas, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Nicholas Maudet, Universite Paris Dauphine, France
Peter McBurney, University of Liverpool, UK
Sanjay Modgil, King's College London, UK
Pavlos Moraitis, Paris Descartes University, France
Nir Oren, University of Aberdeen, UK
Simon Parsons, City University of New York, USA
Henry Prakken, Utrecht University, & University of Groningen, The Netherlands
Iyad Rahwan, Masdar Institute, UAE, & Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Chris Reed, University of Dundee, UK
Nicholas Rotstein, University of Aberdeen, UK
Guillermo Simari, Universidad Nacional del Sur, Argentina
Francesca Toni, Imperial College, London, UK
Serena Villata, University of Turin, Italy
Simon Wells, University of Dundee, UK
Stephan Woltran, TU Vienna, Institute of Information Systems, Austria
Leon van der Torre, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg

--------------------------

Serena Villata, PhD
Department of Computer Science
University of Turin

C.so Svizzera 185

10149 - Turin
Italy

Phone +39 011 67 06 838

Fax +39 011 75 16 03

e-mail villata@di.unito.it

web http://www.di.unito.it/~villata/

Samstag, 11. Dezember 2010

ICAIL 2011 - Call for Papers (revised)

13th International Conference on
Artificial Intelligence & Law (ICAIL 2011)
June 6 - June 10, 2011
University of Pittsburgh School of Law
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
http://www.law.pitt.edu/icail2011
Call for Papers (revised)

The 13th International Conference on AI and Law (ICAIL 2011) will be held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, June 6-10, 2011, at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law under the auspices of the International Association for Artificial Intelligence and Law (IAAIL), an organization devoted to promoting research and development in the field of AI and Law with members throughout the world.  The conference is held in cooperation with the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence, www.aaai.org.
The field of AI and Law is concerned with the study of legal reasoning using computational methods; computational models of argumentation; knowledge acquisition techniques for the legal domain, including natural language processing and data mining; and the formal representation of norms, normative actions, normative systems, norm-governed societies, and multi-agent systems. The field also includes the investigation of techniques from advanced information technology, using law as the illustrative domain; and applications of advanced information technology to support tasks in the legal domain.
ICAIL provides a forum for the presentation and discussion of the latest research results and practical applications and stimulates interdisciplinary and international collaboration. Previous ICAIL conferences have been held biennially since 1987, with proceedings published by ACM. The journal Artificial Intelligence and Law regularly publishes expanded versions of selected ICAIL papers.
Authors are invited to submit papers on topics including but not restricted to

  • Formal and computational models of legal reasoning
  • Knowledge acquisition techniques for the legal domain, including natural language processing and data mining
  • Computational models of argumentation and decision making
  • Legal knowledge representation including legal ontologies and common sense knowledge
  • Computational models of evidential reasoning
  • Modeling norms for multi-agent systems
  • Modeling negotiation and contract formation
  • Computational models of case-based legal reasoning
  • Conceptual or model-based legal information retrieval
  • Automated information extraction from legal databases and texts
  • Intelligent legal tutoring systems
  • Intelligent support systems for the legal domain
  • E-discovery and e-disclosure
  • Automatic legal text classification and summarization
  • Machine learning and data mining applied to legal databases
Papers proposing formal or computational models should provide examples and/or simulations that show the models’ applicability to a realistic legal problem or domain. Papers on applications should describe clearly the motivations behind the project, the techniques employed, and the current state of both implementation and evaluation. All papers should make clear their relation to prior work.
Position papers [new]
Since the field of AI and Law is typically multi-disciplinary and evolves in a dynamic environment, some researchers may have undertaken challenging research concerning ideas of interest to the AI and Law community but that has not yet been completely evaluated.  We welcome papers describing such ideas, so-called “position papers."  These papers should nevertheless meet academic standards, particularly addressing the problem(s), scientific and societal relevance, relation to prior research and literature, research methods and approaches.  Position papers do not have to report actual results although preliminary results are appreciated.
Important Dates (tentative):
  • Submission of abstracts (optional): January 3, 2011
  • Submission of papers: January 10, 2011
  • Notification of acceptance: tba
  • Final revised and formatted papers due: tba
  • Conference: June 6 - June 10, 2011
Submission details [updated]
Papers should not exceed 5000 words.  If an approved style file is used, the maximum length is 10 pages.  Style format template files can be found at http://www.acm.org/sigs/pubs/proceed/template.html. Papers should be submitted by the above paper submission deadline, in PDF or MS Word format.
To aid the reviewing process, authors are requested to submit abstracts of their papers by the above abstract submission deadline.  Abstracts should include at least the title of the paper, up to four keywords, and a contact address for the author.
Both papers and abstracts should be submitted electronically to the conference support system, https://www.conftool.net/icail2011/.
Authors will be notified of the referees’ decision in March 2011.  Papers not accepted for full publication and presentation may be accepted as short research abstracts.  Papers (including research abstracts) must be presented at the conference in order to appear in the proceedings.  Final versions of papers for publication in the proceedings will be due in April 2011.
Donald H. Berman Award for Best Student Paper
To encourage participation by students, IAAIL has created the Donald H. Berman Award for the best paper submitted to ICAIL by a student or students. The award consists of a cash gift and free attendance at ICAIL 2011. For a paper to be considered for the award, the student author(s) should be clearly designated as such when the paper is submitted, and any nonstudent co-authors should provide a statement that the paper is primarily student work. Notification will be made through the ICAIL website, and the award will be presented at the conference banquet.
Conference Officials
Program Chair
Tom van Engers
University of Amsterdam/Faculty of Law
Leibniz Center for Law
www.LeibnizCenter.org
vanEngers@uva.nl
Conference Chair
Kevin D. Ashley
Professor of Law and Intelligent Systems
University of Pittsburgh School of Law
Ashley@pitt.edu
Secretary/Treasurer
Anne Gardner
Atherton, California, USA
gardner@cs.stanford.edu
Program Committee Topic Chairpersons
  Argumentation: Prof. dr. Giovanni Sartor
  E-government and lawyering applications: dr. Patries Kordelaar
  Information Retrieval: Dr. Jack Conrad
  Knowledge Representation and Knowledge Acquisition: Prof. dr. Nicola Guarini
  Logic and agents: Prof. dr. Leon van der Torre
  Natural Language Processing: Prof. dr. Francine Moens
Program Committee
Thomas Agotnes, Infomedia, Norway
Alex Artikis, National Centre for Scientific Research “Demokritos”, Greece
Kevin Ashley, University of Pittsburgh, USA
Katie Atkinson, University of Liverpool, UK
Trevor Bench-Capon, University of Liverpool, UK
Floris Bex, University of Groningen, Netherlands
Guido Boella, University of Turino, Italy
Alexander Boer, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Karl Branting, The MITRE Corporation, USA
Joost Breuker, Universiteit van Amsterdam, Netherlands
Ted Briscoe, University of Cambridge, UK
Jan Broersen, Universiteit Utrecht, Netherlands
Pompeu Casanovas, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain
Jack Conrad, Thomson Reuters, USA
Celia da Costa Pereira, University of Milan, Italy
Bojana Dalbelo Basic, University of Zagreb, Croatia
Paolo Di Lucia, University of Lugano, Italy
P.M.D. Dung, Asian Institute of Technology, Thailand
Nicoletta Fornara, University of Lugano, Italy
Enrico Francesconi, CNR ITTIG, Italy
Dov Gabbay, King’s College London, UK
Tom Gordon, Fraunhofer FOKUS, Germany
Guido Governatori, NICTA Queensland Research Laboratory, Australia
Davide Grossi, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Claire Grover, University of Edinburgh, UK
Nicola Guarino, CNR, Italy
Ben Hachey, Macquarie University, Australia
Carole Hafner, Northeastern University, USA
Jaap Hage, University of Maastricht, Netherlands
Bruce Hedin, H5, USA
Rinke Hoekstra, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Joris Hulstijn, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands
Peter Jackson, Thomson Reuters, USA
Wojtek Jamroga, Université du Luxembourg, Luxembourg
David Koepsell, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands
Patries Kordelaar, Leibniz Foundation for Law, Netherlands
Jerome Lang, Institut de Recherche en Informatique de Toulouse (IRIT), France
Guy Lapalme, Université de Montréal, Canada
David D. Lewis, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Arno Lodder, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands
Emiliano Lorini, Institut de Recherche en Informatique de Toulouse (IRIT), France
Michael Luck, King’s College London, UK
L. Thorne McCarty, Rutgers University, USA
Sien Moens, Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium
Jan Odelstad, University of Gävle, Sweden
Monica Palmirani, University of Bologna, Italy
Gabriella Pigozzi, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Jeremy Pitt, Imperial College London, UK
Henry Prakken, University of Groningen and University of Utrecht, Netherlands
Edwina Rissland, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA
Antonino Rotolo, University of Bologna, Italy
Giovanni Sartor, European University Institute and University of Bologna, Italy
Uri Schild, Bar Ilan University, Israel
Frank Schilder, Technical University of Danmark, Denmark
Erich Schweighofer, University of Vienna, Austria
Marek Sergot, Imperial College London, UK
Daniela Tiscornia, CNR ITTIG, Italy
Viviane Torres da Silva, Universidade Federal Fluminente - UFF , Brazil
Johan van Benthem, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Leon van der Torre, Université du Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Wamberto Vasconcelos, University of Aberdeen, UK
Bart Verheij, University of Groningen, Netherlands
Doug Walton, University of Windsor, Canada
Radboud Winkels, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
Adam Wyner, University of Liverpool, UK