Please download the PDF version of the program here.
The Conference is in English. Only the Special Session “Il diritto nella società digitale / Law and Digital Society” on 11th October is in Italian.
The agenda indicates only the speakers of the Conference. The names of all the authors are presented in the Abstracts and in the Conference materials to be distributed during the Conference
9:00 Registration
9:30 Words of Welcome
Luigi Dei, Rector of the University of Florence
Representative of the Municipality of Florence
Massimo Inguscio, President of the National Research Council of Italy (CNR)
Giuseppe Corasaniti, Head of the Department of Legal Affairs, Ministry of Justice
Marilena Rizzo, President of the Tribunal of Florence
Laura Benedetto, Secretary General of the Florence Chamber of commerce
Luca Bisori, Member of the Steering Committee of the Foundation of Forensic Training of Florence
Sebastiano Faro, Ginevra Peruginelli, Conference Chairs
10:00 Keynote speech
Vincenzo Zeno-Zencovich (Università degli Studi Roma Tre)
New Legal Frameworks and Epistemologies in the Big Data Age
10:30 - 13:30 First Session
Chair: Miguel Poiares Maduro (School of Transnational Governance, European University Institute)
Giancarlo VILELLA, Sandro MAMELI, The European Parliament's Digital Transformation Journey and Its Impact on Law Accessibility and Participation
John DANN, Roberto PAPPALARDO, ELI - Making Legislation Interoperable in Europe – From Dream to Reality
Marc VAN OPIJNEN, The EU Council Conclusions on the On-line Publication of Court Decisions
Fabio PAPPALARDO, The Role and the Foreseeable Future of the Library of the Court of Justice of the European Union
Tommaso AGNOLONI, Improving Public Access to Legislation Through Legal Citation Detection and Linking: The Linkoln Project at the Italian Senate
Jonathan ROBINSON, Law As Data: The Implications for Government Law Drafting and Publishing Offices
Erich SCHWEIGHOFER, Publication of Law for the Digital Age
Philip CHUNG, Andrew MOWBRAY, Building a Commons of Free Access Legal Expertise: The Roles of LIIs
13:30 - Lunch (Courtyard of the Rectorate, ground floor)
14:30 - 16:20 Second Session (parallel sessions)
Chair: Roberto Caso (Università degli Studi di Trento)
Jean GASNAULT, Marie FARGE, Towards Open Science and Open Doctrine. The Principles and Laws That Promote the Sharing of Knowledge, and How They Are Implemented
Gianpaolo Maria RUOTOLO, The Right to Science and Open Access to Legal Knowledge: An International Law(yer) Perspective
Brunero LISEO, Information Exchange in the Big Data Era
François DESSEILLES, A Future between Open Access and Artificial Intelligence: Which Economic Model for Legal Publishing in Belgium?
Lucia PANCIERA, The Bibliography of the Italian Parliament: Enhancing and Disseminating a Bibliography Using the Linked Open Data Model
Chair: Nicola Lettieri (Istituto Nazionale per l'Analisi delle Politiche Pubbliche; Università degli Studi del Sannio)
Sarah MARKIEWICZ, Dissemination of Legal Information: Wedding or Divorce between Open Data Movement and Implementation of Personal Data Protection Law Principles
Václav JANEČEK, Digitalised Legal Information: Towards a New Publication Model
Felipe MOREIRA, Open Legislative Data and Its Impact on Lobbying
Giulio MICHETTI, Arianna TONIOLO, A Model of Justice As a Platform: A Case Study of Open Data Disclosure
Marco GIACALONE, Francesco ROMEO, CREA - Conflict Resolution with Equitative Algorithms – A Cloud-based Decision Support System
Coffee break (Courtyard of the Rectorate, ground floor)
15:00 – 18:30 Special Session (in Italian)
Chair: Tommaso Edoardo Frosini (Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche; Università degli Studi Suor Orsola Benincasa)
Giuseppe CORASANITI, L’intelligenza artificiale e il diritto / AI and Law
Marilena RIZZO, Intelligenza artificiale e predittività nella risoluzione delle controversie / Artificial Intelligence and Predictive Models for Dispute Resolution
Francesco Giuseppe SACCO, Un algoritmo per aiutare la digitalizzazione dell’ABF / An Algorithm to Help the Digitalization of ABF
Fernanda FAINI, Stefano PIETROPAOLI, Fra data governance e protezione dei dati: la dimensione giuridica dei big data nella sfera pubblica / Between Data Governance and Data Protection: The Legal Dimension of Big Data in the Public Sphere
Andrea STAZI, Datificazione delle relazioni socio-economiche e diritto comparato / Datification of Socio-economic Relationships and Comparative Law
Lorenzo BACCI, Linkoln, il software per l’estrazione automatica di riferimenti legislativi e giurisprudenziali da testi in lingua italiana / Linkoln, the Italian Solution for the Automatic Identification of Legislative and Case-law References
Claudio SARRA, La Dichiarazione dei Diritti in Internet e il Regolamento Generale sulla Protezione dei Dati Personali sulle decisioni basate su trattamenti automatizzati: primi passi contro l’abuso del Data Mining? / The Italian Declaration of Rights in the Internet and the European General Data Protection Regulation on Decisions Based on Automated Processing: First Steps Against the “Data Mining Abuse”?
Giulia DEL GAMBA, Regime giuridico per una profilazione legittima in base al RGPD / Legal Regime for Legitimate Profiling Under the GDPR
Rosa Maria DI GIORGI, Il diritto all’oblio nei database parlamentari e nella Rete / The Right to Be forgotten in the Parliamentary Databases and on the Internet
Coffee break
16:30 – 18:15 Third Session (parallel sessions)
Chair: Enrico Francesconi (Publications Office of the EU; CNR - Istituto di Teoria e Tecniche dell'Informazione Giuridica)
John DANN, Anikó GERENCSÉR, EU Vocabularies – Facilitating the Linking of Legal Data
Arttu OKSANEN, Aki HIETANEN, Semantic Finlex: Finnish Legislation and Case Law As a Linked Open Data Service
Patricia MARTÍN-CHOZAS, Víctor RODRÍGUEZ-DONCEL, Towards a Linked Open Data Cloud of Language Resources in the Legal Domain
François MESTRE, Víctor RODRÍGUEZ-DONCEL, IT Law Modelling: Methodologies, Architecture and Ontologies: Critical Legal Positivism Applied in the Domain of IT Law
Chair: Ivan Mokanov (Lexum)
Alejandra ABAL, Legal Design: Applying the Design-driven Approach to Legal Services
Rossana DUCATO, From Transparency to Terms, and Back Again: A Legal Design Approach
Luca CERVONE, From Parliamentary Open Data Visualization Toward Gamified Civic Engagement
Nicola LETTIERI, Visualizing Law: Experiences and Perspectives of Legal Visual Analytics
Arianna ROSSI, DaPIS: A Machine-readable Data Protection Icon Set
20:30 Social event: Dinner at Teatro della Pergola, Via della Pergola, 12/32 - Florence
9:00 Keynote speech
Deirdre Curtin (Department of Law, European University Institute)
Transparency and Information Sharing in the European Union
9:30 - 11:30 Fourth Session
Chair: Marc van Opijnen (Publications Office of the Netherlands)
Jenny PAGLIA, Policy Issues in the Publication of Case Law - An Australian Perspective
Aki HIETANEN, Arttu OKSANEN, Anonymization Service for Finnish Case Law: Opening Data Without Sacrificing Data Protection and Privacy of Citizens
Giovanni CATTARINO, Open Data and the ECLI at the Italian Constitutional Court
Nikitas HATZIMIHAIL, ECLI Implementation in Cyprus: Organizing Legal Information in a Small, Mixed Jurisdiction
Bruno MATHIS, How Much Appetite for Case Law Open Data in France?
Coffee break (Courtyard of the Rectorate, ground floor)
11:45 – 13:30 Fifth Session (parallel sessions)
Chair: Ginevra Peruginelli (CNR - Istituto di Teoria e Tecniche dell'Informazione Giuridica)
Graham GREENLEAF, Philip CHUNG, Foundations of the Common Law
Matthew BELL, Jim MANGIAFICO, Brexit: Meeting the Legal Information Challenge
Sarah SUTHERLAND, Building Commentary Collections in the Free Law Context
John JOERGENSEN, Digitization of U.S. Congressional Documents
Chair: Tommaso Agnoloni (CNR - Istituto di Teoria e Tecniche dell'Informazione Giuridica)
John DANN, Nicolas SANNIER, Digitizing Luxembourg’s Legal Corpora: Experience and Vision
Monica PALMIRANI, Akoma Ntoso for Accessibility of FAO and UN Resolutions
Greg KEMPE, Indigo Legislation Platform - Capture, Consolidate and Publish Legislation in the Cloud
Gianluigi FIORIGLIO, Automation, Legislative Production and Modernization of the Legislative Machine: The New Frontiers of Artificial Intelligence Applied to Law and e-Democracy
Kshitiz VERMA, Sara FRUG, Analyzing NJDG Data to Improve Access to Justice in Indian Courts
13:30 Lunch (Courtyard of the Rectorate, ground floor)
14:45 – 17:30 Sixth Session (parallel sessions)
Chair: Enrico Francesconi (European University Institute; Università di Bologna)
Warren AGIN, Using Machine Learning to Predict Success Or Failure in Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Cases
Giuseppe VACIAGO, Opportunities and Challenges in the Legal Tech Services in the Italian and European Framework
Camille LE DOUARON, Building Common Datasets for Legal AI
Giorgio GIANNONE CODIGLIONE, Entropy in Digital Information and the Enforcement of Law: Towards a Unification of Remedies?
Pierre-Paul LEMYRE, Artificial Intelligence at Lexum
Imad IBRAHIM, International Environmental Agreements in the Age of Big Data and Algorithms
František KASL, Legal Limitations of Algorithmic Analytical Tools Against Disinformation
Chair: Sebastiano Faro (CNR - Istituto di Teoria e Tecniche dell'Informazione Giuridica)
Janet ODETSI-TWUM, Public Access to Primary Legal Information in Ghana: Opportunities and Challenges
Deborah GRBAC, Free Access to United Nations Documents and Publications: Strategies for Navigating a Complex Landscape
Ranbir SINGH, Emancipating Law and Legal Knowledge by Government and Non-State Actors in India
Elena Alina ONTANU, EU Judicial Procedures and Case Law Databases: What’s Going On and What May Lay Ahead
Mark TOTTENHAM, How to Create an International Encyclopaedia of Case Law
Tokuyasu KAKUTA, Makoto NAKAMURA, Legislation Supporting System Based on Legal Computer Programming As SDL (Software Defined Law)
Ai sensi dell’art. 20, comma 1, lettera b) del vigente Regolamento per la Formazione Professionale Continua approvato dal CNF in data 16/07/2014 e modificato con delibera del 30/07/2015, per la partecipazione all’evento è prevista l’attribuzione di n. 6 crediti formativi in materia non obbligatoria per ogni singola sessione (mattina e/o pomeridiana) ovvero n. 20 crediti formativi (ex art. 20, comma 2, LETTERA B) per l’intero evento.
Si ricorda che ai sensi dell’art. 20, comma 5 dello stesso regolamento, per la partecipazione alla singola sessione i crediti formativi verranno riconosciuti solo qualora risulti documentata la partecipazione dell’iscritto all’intera sessione.
Per la partecipazione all’intero evento si ricorda che i 20 crediti formativi saranno riconosciuti qualora risulti documentata la partecipazione dell’iscritto all’80% del corso.