Presents an innovative approach to representing legal knowledge in knowledge-based systems by departing, not from the standard representation methods, but from the requirements set by the legal domain. Drawing from a broad analysis of literature on legal theory and an in-depth analysis of the Dutch Employment Benefit Act, provides an ontology for conceptual representation that caters to the peculiarities of the legal domain, and models that can be assembled from elements for various goals. A formal version of the ontology is discussed in P. R. S. Visser's Knowledge Representation for Multiple Legal Tasks: A Case Study of the Interaction Problem in the Legal Domain , which is part of the same series. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
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