Blogs about: Criminal Law Information Systems

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Shay et al.: Do Robots Dream of Electric Laws? An Experiment in Law as Algorithm

legalinformatics wrote 2 months ago: Professor Dr. Lisa Shay of the West Point Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, … more →

Tags: articles and papers, Research Findings, Conference papers, Ambiguity in statutory language, Ambiguity of legal rules, Criminal law algorithms, Determinacy of legal rules, Gregory Conti, Indeterminacy of legal rules

Ferguson on Predictive Policing: The Future of Reasonable Suspicion

legalinformatics wrote 3 months ago: Professor Andrew G. Ferguson of University of the District of Columbia Law School has published Pred … more →

Tags: applications, technology developments, Technology & Tools, Andrew G. Ferguson, Criminal justice information systems, Emory Law Journal, Prediction in criminal justice, Prediction in criminal law, Prediction in criminal procedure

Koops: Criminal Law and Cyberspace as a Challenge for Legal Research

legalinformatics wrote 5 months ago: Professor Dr. Bert-Jaap Koops of Tilburg University Institute of Law, Technology, and Society has pu … more →

Tags: articles and papers, Legal Research, Regulatory information systems, Scripted, Regulation Theory, Regulatory tool-box, multi-level-governance, Legal regulation information systems, Criminal legal research

Bushway et al. on the Influence of Advisory Sentencing Guidelines on Judicial Decision Making

legalinformatics wrote 11 months ago: Professor Dr. Shawn D. Bushway of the University of Albany, Professor Dr. Emily G. Owens of Cornell … more →

Tags: articles and papers, Research Findings, Criminal procedure information systems, Judicial decisionmaking, Judges' legal decisionmaking, Journal of Empirical Legal Studies, Shawn D. Bushway, Emily G. Owens, Anne Morrison Piehl

Fulda on Implications of a Logical Paradox for Computer-dispensed Justice Reconsidered

legalinformatics wrote 1 year ago: Dr. Joseph S. Fulda has published Implications of a logical paradox for computer-dispensed justice r … more →

Tags: articles and papers, applications, Artificial intelligence and law, Criminal procedure information systems, Joseph S. Fulda, J. S. Fulda, Intelligent agents' legal decision making, Intelligent agents' decisionmaking in criminal cases, Modeling judges' legal decisionmaking

Lanzara on How New Media Change the Way Judges Deal with Trial Transcripts

legalinformatics wrote 2 years ago: Professor Dr. Giovan Francesco Lanzara of Università di Bologna Dipartimento di Scienza Politica has … more →

Tags: articles and papers, Research Findings, Visualization of legal information, Legal evidence information systems, Criminal procedure information systems, Ethnographic methods in legal informatics, Ethnographic methods in legal communication studies, Video of court proceedings, Giovan Francesco Lanzara

Hartley, Miller, & Spohn on Type of Counsel and Its Effect on Criminal Court Outcomes1 comment

legalinformatics wrote 2 years ago: Professor Dr. Richard D. Hartley and Professor Dr. Holly Ventura Miller, both of The University of T … more →

Tags: articles and papers, Research Findings, Legal decisionmaking, Criminal procedure information systems, Legal communication, Empirical methods in legal communication studies, Judges' legal decisionmaking, Criminal Trials, Journal of Criminal Justice

Jackson on Court-Provided Trial Technology in Criminal Trials

legalinformatics wrote 2 years ago: Professor Sheryl Jackson of the Queensland University of Technology School of Law has published Cour … more →

Tags: articles and papers, applications, Criminal procedure information systems, Trial Technology, Sheryl Jackson, Common Law World Review, Criminal trial technology

Hoffmeister on Jurors in the Digital Age

legalinformatics wrote 2 years ago: Professor Thaddeus Hoffmeister of the University of Dayton School of Law has posted a paper entitled … more →

Tags: articles and papers, Research Findings, Legal Research, Criminal procedure information systems, Jurors' legal information behavior, Legal communication, Survey methods in legal informatics, Empirical methods in legal communication studies, Survey methods in legal communication studies

Green & Kugler on Community Perceptions of Theft Seriousness1 comment

legalinformatics wrote 2 years ago: Professor Stuart P. Green of the Rutgers University School of Law–Newark, and Dr. Matthew B. Kugler … more →

Tags: articles and papers, Research Findings, Legal Ontologies, Legal knowledge representation, Legal communication, Empirical methods in legal informatics, Empirical methods in legal communication studies, Journal of Empirical Legal Studies, Stuart P. Green

Gazal-Ayal & Sulitzeanu-Kenan on Ethnic In-Group Bias in Judicial Decisions

legalinformatics wrote 2 years ago: Dr. Oren Gazal-Ayal of the University of Haifa Faculty of Law, and Dr. Raanan Sulitzeanu-Kenan of th … more →

Tags: articles and papers, Research Findings, Legal information behavior, Legal decisionmaking, Criminal procedure information systems, Empirical methods in legal informatics, Judicial decisionmaking, Judges' legal information behavior, Empirical methods in legal communication studies

Bex et al. on A Hybrid Formal Theory of Arguments, Stories, and Criminal Evidence

legalinformatics wrote 2 years ago: Dr. Floris J. Bex of The University of Dundee Argumentation Research Group, and colleagues, have pub … more →

Tags: articles and papers, applications, legal argument, Legal Argumentation, Artificial intelligence and law, Legal evidence information systems, Criminal procedure information systems, Legal communication, Floris Bex

Mears & Barnes, Toward a Systematic Foundation for Identifying Evidence-Based Criminal Justice Sanctions and Their Relative Effectiveness

legalinformatics wrote 2 years ago: Professor Daniel P. Mears of the Florida State University College of Criminology and Criminal Justic … more →

Tags: articles and papers, Literature Reviews, Legal decisionmaking, Criminal justice information systems, Criminal procedure information systems, Daniel P. Mears, J.C. Barnes, Journal of Criminal Justice, Decisionmaking in criminal law

Badeaux on Problems with the Preservation of Evidence in Texas1 comment

legalinformatics wrote 2 years ago: Danielle Badeaux of the Texas Tech University School of Law has published The DNA’s Over There … more →

Tags: articles and papers, DNA evidence, Legal evidence information systems, Criminal procedure information systems, DNA evidence in criminal trials, Danielle Badeaux, Texas Tech Administrative Law Journal, Preservation of legal evidence, Retention of legal evidence

Gray & Barnett on Sustainable Juries: Thinking Outside Peer Jury Criminal Trials

legalinformatics wrote 2 years ago: Professor Dr. Anthony Gray and Eola Barnett, LLB, both of the University of Southern Queensland Scho … more →

Tags: articles and papers, Advisory juries, Anthony Gray, Criminal procedure information systems, Eola Barnett, Journal of Judicial Administration, Juries, Jurors' legal decisionmaking, Jurors' legal information processing

Azuelos-Atias On the Incoherence of Legal Language to the General Public

legalinformatics wrote 2 years ago: Dr. Sol Azuelos-Atias of the University of Haifa Department of Hebrew Language has published On the … more →

Tags: articles and papers, Linguistics and law, Criminal procedure information systems, Legal communication, legal language, Nonlawyers' understanding of legal language, International Journal for the Semiotics of Law, Sol Azuelos-Atias, Semantics and law

Wheate & Jamieson on A Tale of Two Approaches – The NAS Report and the Law Commission Consultation Paper on Forensic Science

legalinformatics wrote 2 years ago: Dr. Rhonda M. Wheate, of the Glasgow Caledonian University School of Law and Social Sciences, Depart … more →

Tags: articles and papers, scientific evidence, Legal evidence information systems, Criminal procedure information systems, Legal expert evidence information systems, Forensic Science, forensic sciences, Legal expert evidence, Strengthening Forensic Science in the United States: A

Wheatcroft & Ellison on the Influence of Courtroom Questioning and Pre-Trial Preparation on Adult Witness Accuracy1 comment

legalinformatics wrote 3 years ago: Dr. Jacqueline Wheatcroft of the University of Liverpool School of Psychology Centre for Investigati … more →

Tags: Research Findings, Legal evidence information systems, Criminal procedure information systems, Legal communication, Empirical methods in legal informatics, Eyewitness testimony as evidence, Empirical methods in legal communication studies, Psychological methods in legal informatics, Psychological methods in legal information studies

Lange et al. on Contextual Biases in the Interpretation of Auditory Evidence

legalinformatics wrote 3 years ago: Nick D. Lange of the University of Oklahoma Department of Psychology Decision Processes Laboratory, … more →

Tags: articles and papers, Research Findings, Legal evidence information systems, Criminal procedure information systems, Law and Human Behavior, Bias in jurors' decisionmaking, Bias in jurors' legal decisionmaking, Context and legal interpretation, Context and interpretation of legal evidence


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