[UAI] Final CFP ICAIL-2001 (AI & Law)

From: Henry Prakken (henry@cs.uu.nl)
Date: Sun Dec 10 2000 - 13:47:10 PST

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    (With apologies if you receive multiple copies of this message)

                                    Final Call for Papers

                            Eighth International Conference on
                             ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE and LAW
                                       (ICAIL-2001)

                                      May 21-25, 2001
                                 St. Louis, Missouri, USA

                            http://www.cs.wustl.edu/icail2001/

    * Sponsored by:
    - The International Association for Artificial Intelligence and Law (IAAIL)
    - Washington University in St. Louis

    * In cooperation with:
    - the American Association of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI).

    The field of AI and law is concerned with:

    * the investigation of legal reasoning and argumentation using
      computational methods
    * applications of AI and advanced information technology to support
      tasks in regulated domains, especially for legal practice and
      education.
    * the investigation of techniques from AI and advanced information
      technology using law as the example domain

    ICAIL-2001 will be held 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.
    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 taken place in Boston (1987), Vancouver
    (1989), Oxford (1991), Amsterdam (1993), College Park, Maryland
    (1995), Melbourne (1997), and Oslo (1999). As for these past
    conferences, the accepted papers will be published in a conference
    proceedings.

    Authors are invited to submit papers on topics including but not
    restricted to:

    * Legal Knowledge-Based Systems
    * Advanced Judicial Support Systems
    * Conceptual or Model-Based Legal Information Retrieval
    * Case-Based Legal Reasoning
    * Computational Models of Legal Reasoning and Argumentation
    * Representation of Legal and Common Sense Knowledge
    * Representation of other Norm-Governed Systems (e.g. business rules,
      organisation rules, security regulations, and rules of order)
    * Applications of Machine Learning to Law
    * Automated Extraction of Information from Legal Texts
    * Intelligent Legal Tutoring Systems
    * Advanced Legal Document Drafting Systems
    * Legal Ontologies
    * Reasoning with Uncertainty in Evidential Reasoning

    Special encouragement is given to submissions concerning new topics such
    as:

    * Legal Applications of Knowledge-based Electronic Commerce
    * Advanced Internet Legal Research Aids
    * Knowledge Discovery in Legal Databases
    * Legal XML for Integration with Information Retrieval, Document
      Drafting and Knowledge-Based Systems
    * Advanced Tools for Legal Knowledge Management
    * Models of Multi-Agent Systems with Legal Agents
    * Modelling of Norms for Multi-Agent Interaction or Electronic
      Institutions

    Papers on theoretical issues in AI and in jurisprudence or legal
    philosophy are invited provided that the relevance to AI and Law
    is clearly demonstrated. Papers on applications should include a
    description of the nature and purpose of the application, the
    techniques employed, and the current state of implementation.

    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. The winner(s) of the award, which is presented at the
    conference banquet, receive a cash gift and free attendance at
    ICAIL-2001.

    ICAIL WORKSHOPS AND TUTORIALS

    ICAIL-2001 will also include a tutorial and workshop program.

    * Currently planned workshops: * Currently planned tutorials:
    - - Legal Knowledge Systems in Action - Introduction to AI & Law
    - - AI and Legal Evidence - Finding Law on the Internet
    - - Regulated Electronic Societies - AI & Law and E-commerce

    See the ICAIL-2001 Web site for more information, including calls
    for papers of the workshops.

    INVITED SPEAKERS

    * Kevin D. Ashley, School of Law / Learning Research and Development
      Center, University of Pittsburgh, USA
    * Benjamin Grosof, MIT Sloan School of Management, USA
    * Frederick Schauer, JFK School of Government, Harvard University, USA

    IMPORTANT DATES

    * Workshop and tutorial proposals: December 1, 2000. (Past)
    * Submission of paper: January 12, 2001.
    * Notification of acceptance: March 12, 2001.
    * Camera-ready copies due: April 13, 2001.
    * Conference: May 21-25, 2001.

    SUBMISSION DETAILS

    Paper submissions must be received by the Program Chair by January 12,
    2001. Style files for Word, WordPerfect and LaTeX are available
    at http://www.acm.org/sigs/pubs/proceed/template.html.
    Papers should not exceed 5000 words or, if one of the style files
    is used, 10 pages. Short papers not exceeding 2500 words (or five
    pages if a style file is used) are also invited, particularly in the
    area of "applications experience".

    Electronic paper submissions are strongly preferred and should be sent
    to the Program Chair as an email attachment, using PDF or PostScript
    format. To submit by ordinary mail, send six (6) hard copies of the
    complete paper to the Program Chair at the address below.

    Guidelines for authors, including downloadable style files and
    templates, are available at the conference WEB site.

    Program Chair

         Henry Prakken
         Institute of Information and Computing Sciences
         Utrecht University
         PO Box 80089
         3508 TB Utrecht, The Netherlands
         email: henry@cs.uu.nl
         phone: (+31 30) 2532313
         fax: (+31 30) 2513791

    Conference Chair

         Ronald P. Loui
         Department of Computer Science
         Washington University-in-Saint-Louis
         email: loui@ai.wustl.edu

    Secretary/Treasurer:

         Carole D. Hafner
         College of Computer Science
         Northeastern University
         Boston, MA 02115 USA
         email: hafner@ccs.neu.edu
         phone: 617-373-5116
         fax: 617-373-5121

    Program Committee:

         Vincent Aleven Carnegie Mellon University, USA
         Kevin D. Ashley University of Pittsburgh, USA
         Trevor J.M. Bench-Capon University of Liverpool, UK
         L. Karl Branting University of Wyoming, USA
         Rosaria Conte CNR Rome, Italy
         Anne Gardner Stanford, USA
         Thomas F. Gordon GMD Bonn, Germany
         Benjamin Grosof Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
         Carole D. Hafner Northeastern University, USA
         Jaap Hage Maastricht University, The Netherlands
         Peter Jackson West Group, USA
         Andrew J.I. Jones University of Oslo, Norway
         Steven Kimbrough University of Pennsylvania, USA
         Ronald P. Loui Washington University, USA
         L. Thorne McCarty Rutgers University, USA
         Anja Oskamp Free University Amsterdam, The Netherlands
         Edwina L. Rissland University of Massachusetts, USA
         Giovanni Sartor Queen's U. Belfast, UK / U. Bologna, Italy
         Marek J. Sergot Imperial College London, UK
         Andrew Stranieri La Trobe University, Australia
         John Zeleznikow La Trobe University, Australia



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