One test person was very frustrated when he
entered the search term “Environmental Protection
Act 1990” in BAILII and was returned 747 results
that seemed to included everything but what he was
looking for. “Regulation of Care (Scotland) Act
2001” was returned first noted as having 100%
relevance. Another test person became frustrated
when she was looking for “Directive 94/62” in
Justis, typed the search term “Directive 94/62” into
the search box, and the correct document was
returned as result number 26.
People who are not computer professional
appreciate simple input. About the interface on
LexisNexis: “Too fussy… way too much stuff. You
get used to search engines and like Google for
example, it’s just one great huge bar that you put the
information into.”
If legal publishers wish to improve the quality of
their service, a good source to learn from is
commercial Internet search engines which have put a
lot of effort into their relevance-ranking algorithms.
Web documents and legal documents share two core
features – structured text and interlinked documents.
Search Engine Optimisation is a new industry, 2-
3 years old, that originates from web-design. It does
not deal with optimisation of search engines, as the
name suggests, but rather with optimisation of
websites for top positioning on search engines.
Search engine optimisers are well-aware of the
features that influence relevance ranking most. Their
knowledge can help in the design and
implementation of legal text retrieval systems.
4 MAP-BASED ACCESS TO
LOCATION-SPECIFIC LAW
Legal Atlas, operated by Framfab Nederland,
provides access to regulations through a map-view
on the legislation (Peters & van Engers 2004). In
this view, law is retrievable knowledge objects
rather than hierarchical structure of legal text. Dutch
spatial-planning standards support such
objectification of law and further linking of law
objects to geo-spatial objects on the map. The
approach allows challenging the traditional question
“I want this here… Is it possible?” by targeting the
reverse question, “I want this… Show me where it is
possible!” A typical application area for Legal Atlas
is urban planning where the user interrogates the
system, and the system responds via a digital map as
well as more traditional representations such as text.
Legal Atlas is still in the stage of the first
prototype. Nonetheless, interviews with intended
users show that the system has a good market
potential. The prototype has caused some changes in
the meta-data strategies for local law applied by the
Dutch Ministry of Internal Affairs.
4.1 DURP and IMRO
The corner stone of spatial-planning law in the
Netherlands is zoning plan (“bestemmingsplan”) – a
map with legal information attached to spatial-
planning objects. Zoning plans are legally binding,
they are a form of legislation.
DURP (2004) is the initiative on digital
exchange of legal spatial planning data started by
the Dutch Ministry of Spatial Affairs and
Environmental Issues. DURP invites organizations,
including the large number of municipalities, to
standardize their digital zoning plans, which
facilitates interoperability between different layers
of government while dealing with spatial planning.
DURP introduces a standard for exchange of
spatial planning data called IMRO (2004). About
one thousand IMRO codes formally define the
purpose and functionality of spatial planning objects.
Together with textual “voorschrift” (prescription),
the codes tell the user what is and is not allowed in
various IMRO-coded areas on the map. Legal Atlas
makes use of the coding and enables querying of the
underlying legal system using a detailed map
representing legal constraints and possibilities.
4.2 Geographic Information Systems
(GIS)
GIS software helps to create and visualize graphic
information (usually geo-spatial maps), and to
interact with it. A distinguished feature of GIS is
representation of visual information in layers as a
means of information filtering. A user combines the
layers according to his or her information needs.
Legal Atlas uses Autodesk MapGuide.
MapGuide Viewer, a web-browser plug-in, offers
display, query, and analytical features for a variety
of platforms and browsers.
Open GIS Consortium (2004) is leading the
development of geo-processing interoperability
computing standards to create open and extensible
APIs for geographic information systems. In other
words, Open GIS standards make sure that GIS tools
from different vendors can cooperate. MapGuide is
Open GIS compliant.
Legal Atlas uses ISIS FlexiWeb (2004) as the
main user interface – a shell around MapGuide that
enables the combination of SQL queries of legal
texts with GIS retrieval of related map objects.
ICEIS 2004 - HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION
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