OpenLaws.eu is a new project aimed at improving access to legal information in Europe.
In 2013 the project received funding from European Commission (DG Justice).
According to the project’s Website, the project lasts for two years and begins in April 2014.
The project has a Twitter account, @OpenLaws, and a Facebook page.
Here is a description of the project, from the grant announcement:
Our vision is to provide open and easy access to legal information for everybody: Legal professionals, citizens and businesses.
For this purpose we will link legal content (legislation and case law based on open data), provide meta search functionalities, offer productivity tools (setting favorites, highlighting, tagging, etc), and run an open access journal. We are following an open innovation strategy, so everybody will be invited to contribute.
The project has already made available legal meta-search tools for the European Union and Austria.
Here are the project’s vision and objectives, from the project’s About page:
Vision
openlaws.eu aims at opening access to existing legal information systems and proactively involving and integrating our target groups, i.e. communities of individuals and businesses, legal professionals and public bodies. Open innovation, mass customization, big data analysis, social features and social networks are already highly successful in other markets and we want to introduce them in the legal domain on a European scale. Based on open data, open source software and open innovation principles we are adding a “social layer” to the existing “institutional layer” of legal information systems.
Objectives
The main objectives are:
- To create a clear BOLD Vision 2020 about what Big Open Legal Data (BOLD) could do in the year 2020 and propose a roadmap to implement it.
- To build a BOLD ICT Platform, based on open source software, which will be the first step to combine legal content and the knowledge and feedback of the community.
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The consortium carrying out the project includes:
- University of Amsterdam, Leibnitz Center for Law
- Salzburg University of Applied Sciences
- London School of Economics and Political Science
- University of Sussex
- Alpenite srl
- BY WASS GmbH
Filed under: Applications, Projects Tagged: Big data analysis and law, Big data and law, Big Open Legal Data, BOLD, BOLD ICT, BOLD ICT platform, Chris Marsden, Clemens Wass, eparticipation, eparticipation systems, EU, Free access to law, Judicial information systems, Legal big data, Legal information retrieval, Legal Linked Data, Legal metasearch, Legal metasearch engines, Legal metasearch systems, Legal open access journals, Legal scholarly communication, Legal social networks, Legislative information systems, Leibniz Center for Law, Linked Data and law, Open access to legal scholarship, Open legal data, OpenLaws, OpenLaws.eu, Public access to legal data, Public access to legal information, Radboud Winkels, Reuse of legal data, Reuse of legal information, Reuse of open legal data, Reuse of open legal information, Social networks and law, User-generated content and legal information systems
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