2019
Garofalakis, John; Plessas, Konstantinos; Plessas, Athanasios; Spiliopoulou, Panoraia
Modelling Legal Documents For Their Exploitation As Open Data Proceedings Article
In: Abramowicz, Witold; Corchuelo, Rafael (Ed.): Business Information Systems. BIS 2019., pp. 30-44, Springer, Cham, 2019, ISBN: 978-3-030-20484-6.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Akoma Ntoso, Greek legislation, Legal Open Data, Modelling
@inproceedings{Garofalakis2019,
title = {Modelling Legal Documents For Their Exploitation As Open Data},
author = {John Garofalakis and Konstantinos Plessas and Athanasios Plessas and Panoraia Spiliopoulou},
editor = {Witold Abramowicz and Rafael Corchuelo},
url = {https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-20485-3_3},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-20485-3_3},
isbn = {978-3-030-20484-6},
year = {2019},
date = {2019-05-18},
booktitle = {Business Information Systems. BIS 2019.},
volume = {353},
pages = {30-44},
publisher = {Springer, Cham},
series = {Lecture Notes in Business Information Processing},
abstract = {As our society becomes more and more complex, legal documents are produced at an increasingly fast pace, generating datasets that show many of the characteristics that define Big Data. On the other hand, as the trend of Open Data has spread widely in the government sector nowadays, publication of legal documents in the form of Open Data is expected to yield important benefits. In this paper, we propose the modelling of Greek legal texts based on the Akoma Ntoso document model, which is a necessary step for their representation as Open Data and we describe use cases that show how these massive legal open datasets could be further exploited.},
keywords = {Akoma Ntoso, Greek legislation, Legal Open Data, Modelling},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
As our society becomes more and more complex, legal documents are produced at an increasingly fast pace, generating datasets that show many of the characteristics that define Big Data. On the other hand, as the trend of Open Data has spread widely in the government sector nowadays, publication of legal documents in the form of Open Data is expected to yield important benefits. In this paper, we propose the modelling of Greek legal texts based on the Akoma Ntoso document model, which is a necessary step for their representation as Open Data and we describe use cases that show how these massive legal open datasets could be further exploited.