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Legislative knowledge base systems for public administration: some practical issues
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Source International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law archive
Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Artificial intelligence and law table of contents
Oxford, England
Pages: 108 - 117  
Year of Publication: 1991
ISBN:0-89791-399-X
Authors
Peter Johnson  SoftLaw Corporation, Canberra, Australia
David Mead  SoftLaw Corporation, Canberra, Australia
Sponsor
SIGART: ACM Special Interest Group on Artificial Intelligence
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

Allen and Saxon
Bench-Capon et. al.
 
Bing
Jon Bing, "Three Generations of Computerized Systems for Public Administration and some Implications for Legal Decision Making", (1990) Vol. 3 No. 2 Ratio Juris, 219.
 
Brown
Brown, Shibboleths of Law: Reification, Plain-English and Popular Legal Symbolism. Legal Research Foundation Enc., Publication No. 27 (1987).
 
de Bessonet
Gary de Bessonet, "An Automated Intelligent System Based on a Model of a Legal System." (1984) 10, Rutglers Computer and Technology Law Journal.
 
Gardner, 1984
 
Gardner, 1985
Anne Gardner, "Overview of an Artificial Intelligence Approach to Legal Reasoning". "In Computing Power and Legal Reasoning" (Walter Ed.), West Publishing Co., St. Paul, Minnesota 1985, 247
 
Greenleaf
Graham Greenleaf, "Legal Expert Systems - Robot Lawyers?", Paper presented at the Australian Legal Convention, Darling Harbour, Sydney, August 1989.
 
Greenleaf, et. al, 1988
Graham Greenleaf, Andrew Mowbray and Alan Tyree, "Communications aspects of Legal Expert Systems - Incorporating them in Shells for Lawyers". National Conference on Law, Computers and Artificial Intelligence, University of Exeter, United Kingdom 17- 18 November 1988.
 
Greenleaf, et. al, 1987
Graham Cn-emnleaf, Andrew Mowbray and Alan Tyree, "Legal l~tpert ~;ygtemg: Word~. Words. Words". (1987) 3 Yearbook of Law Computers and Technology, 119.
 
Johnson and Mead
Peter Johnson and David Mead, "Natural Language - An Appropriate Knowledge Representation Scheme for Legislative Expert Systems". Unpublished paper, Canberra 1991.
 
Kuopus
Jorma Kuopus, Hallirmon Lainataisuus ja Automatisoitu verohallinto, "The Rule of Law and Computerised Administration of Taxation, Finnish Lawyers", Publishing Company, Jyvaskyla 1988, with an English Summary.
 
Magnusson
Rissland and Skalak
Routen
 
Schartum
Dag Wiese Schartum, "Representation of Legal Rules in Computer Programs - some Implications on Legal Protection and Service to Citizens: Norwegian Research Centre for Computers and Law.
Sherman
 
Sprowl
James Sprowl, "A Manual for Computer Assisted Legal Research", American Bar Foundation, Chicago 1976.
 
Taylor and Browne
Andrew Taylor and Julie Browne, "Supporting Local Office Adjudication: The Plurality of Requirements, the Multiplicity of Options and the Problems of Organisations". Presented at BILETA third Annual Conference, Warwick, 1988.

CITED BY  7

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David Mead: colleagues

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