Journal: Artif. Intell. Law

Volume 5, Issue 4

243 -- 248Jaap Hage. Introduction: Papers from the Jurix 95 Conference
249 -- 261Trevor J. M. Bench-Capon. Argument in Artificial Intelligence and Law
263 -- 290Niels Peek. Representing Law in Partial Information Structures
291 -- 322Anja Oskamp, Maaike Tragter. Automated Legal Decision Systems in Practice: The Mirror of Reality
323 -- 340Constantijn Heesen, Vincent Homburg, Margriet Offereins. An Agent View on Law

Volume 5, Issue 3

179 -- 205Adel Saadoun, Jean-Louis Ermine, Claude Belair, Jean-Mark Pouyot. A Knowledge Engineering Framework for Intelligent Retrieval of Legal Case Studies
207 -- 242Pepijn R. S. Visser, Trevor J. M. Bench-Capon, H. Jaap van den Herik. A Method for Conceptualising Legal Domains: An Example from the Dutch Unemployment Benefits Act

Volume 5, Issue 1-2

1 -- 74Edwina L. Rissland, David B. Skalak, M. Timur Friedman. Evaluating a Legal Argument Program: The BankXX Experiments
75 -- 76Katsumi Nitta, Hajime Yoshino. A Symposium on Artificial Intelligence and Research in Japan
77 -- 96Hajime Yoshino. On the Logical Foundations of Compound Predicate Formulae for Legal Knowledge Representation
97 -- 118Tokuyasu Kakuta, Makoto Haraguchi, Yoshiaki Okubo. A Goal-Dependent Abstraction for Legal Reasoning by Analogy
119 -- 137Masaki Kurematsu, Takahira Yamaguchi. A Legal Ontology Refinement Support Environment Using a Machine-Readable Dictionary
139 -- 159Katsumi Nitta, Masato Shibasaki. Defeasible Reasoning in Japanese Criminal Jurisprudence
161 -- 176Satoshi Tojo, Katsumi Nitta. Similarity of Legal Cases: From Temporal Relations of Affairs