with other external documents. Copyright recogni-
tion is, of course, considered a key quality topic.
All the authors must be identified. They can be
either self-appointed candidates, nominated by any
person or body, or invited by any member of the
scientific council. Their participation is subjected to
approval by the scientific council.
The LAW&ICT Encyclopaedia will be open to
public participation using forums and comments
with standard netiquette.
4.4 The LAW&ICT LEFIS
Classification: A Common
Architecture for IR
The LAW&ICT LEFIS classification is aimed at
providing a shared systematic conceptual mainframe
for the virtual campus. Therefore, it is being used
both at the courses, the digital library and the
Wikipedia.
It is a faceted (Ranganathan, 1967) and expand-
able classification that has currently 75 classes. The
classification is based on a methodology of faceting
concepts for applied social science domains that has
been developed in previous projects (García,
Galindo, Lasala y Yubero, 2005; García, in press).
It has six trees addressing domains (society,
rights and duties, commerce, and government), pro-
cedures and tools (politic, legal, managerial, educa-
tional, technological and research-oriented), agents
(generic and individuals), perspective (discipline,
ideology), frame (space and time), and form and
media (language, form, media and type of docu-
ment).
Each document is indexed for eleven facets and
subfacets: domain, procedures, actors, perspective,
time, place, multinational, national, spatial scope,
language, form, media, and type of document. The
order of the facets produces the citation index or
ordering string for the document. It is possible to
assign more than one term in each facet, though one
has to function as main one for classificatory pur-
poses.
5 THE IDENTIFICATION
SYSTEM
One of the problems risen when designing the tech-
nical solution for the LAW&ICT Shared Virtual
Campus Website was the way that users with privi-
leges to access to some of the information and func-
tionalities (mainly teachers and students) would be
identified, remaining a part of the contents for public
access.
Because of the previous works, the research
group already had developed an identification mod-
ule based on digital certificates to substitute the
identification mechanism of Moodle based on the
pair user-password, as well as a Public Key Infra-
structure (LEFIS-PKI), based on open standards
(X.509, SSL, S/MIME), to manage the provision and
maintenance of digital certificates.
For this project, authentication module is been
updated, using webservices instead of the POST/curl
method, as the way to access the AuthMgr PKI sys-
tem of the LAW&ICT Shared Virtual Campus Web-
site.
Also, we want to extend the identification by
means of digital certificate to limit the access to a
private part of the LAW&ICT Digital Library. To
this end, a wrapper for redirecting certified user to
the resources in the digital library is been developed,
this is to say, an authentication module to integrate
LEFIS-PKI and Greenstone, in the same way as LE-
FIS-PKI and Moodle are.
The third tool, LEFISpedia, remains free access
for everybody searching information about Law and
ICT.
6 CONCLUSIONS
Development and innovation is being carried out in
the integration of e-learning, wiki, digital libraries
and PKI software to provide an integrated environ-
ment for knowledge representation, organization and
sharing in the field of Law and Information and
Communication Technologies.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This research is supported by the European Union,
Lifelong Learning Programme 2007–2013, ref.:
133837-LLP-1-2007-1-ES-ERASMUS-EVC.
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Dalbello, M; Saracevic, T; Palmer, C, et al. (2004). Diffu-
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