Paper Submission Deadline: May 28, 2012
We invite submission of papers on modelling policy-making. Below, we outline the intended audience, context, the topics of interest, and submission details.
Context
We live in an age where citizens are beginning to demand greater transparency and accountability of their political leaders. Furthermore, those who govern and decide on policy are beginning to realise the need for new governance models that emphasise deliberative democracy and promote widespread public participation in all phases of the policy-making cycle: 1) agenda set-
ting, 2) policy analysis, 3) lawmaking, 4) implementation, and 5) monitoring. As governments must become more ecient and eective with the resources available, modern information and communications technology (ICT)are being drawn on to address problems of information processing in the phases. One of the key problems is policy content analysis and modelling,particularly the gap between on the one hand policy proposals and formulations that are expressed in quantitative and narrative forms and on the
other hand formal models that can be used to systematically represent and reason with the information contained in the proposals and formulations.
Special Issue Theme
The editors invite submissions of original research about the application of ICT and Computer Science to the rst three phases of the policy cycle agenda setting, policy analysis, and lawmaking. The research should seek to address the gap noted above. The journal volume focuses particularly on using and integrating a range of subcomponents information extraction, text processing,
representation, modelling, simulation, reasoning, and argument to provide policy making tools to the public and public administrators. While submissions about tool development and practice are welcome, the editors particularly encourage submission of articles that address formal, conceptual, and/or computational issues. Some specificc topics within the theme are:
information extraction from natural language text
policy ontologies
formal logical representations of policies
transformations from policy language to executable policy rules
argumentation about policy proposals
web-based tools that support participatory policy-making
tools for public understanding of arguments behind policy decisions
visualising policies and arguments about policies
computational models of policies and arguments about policies
integration tools
multi-agent policy simulations
Submission Details
Authors are invited to submit an original, previously unpublished, research paper of up to 30 pages pertaining to the special issue theme. The paper should follow the journal's instructions for authors and be submitted online. See the dropdown tab under the section FOR AUTHORS AND EDITORS.
Instructions for Authors on:
https://www.springer.com/computer/ai/journal/10506
Submit Online on:
https://www.springer.com/computer/ai/journal/10506
Each submitted paper will be carefully peer-reviewed based on originality, signicance, technical soundness, and clarity of exposition and relevance for the journal.
Contact the special issue editors with any questions.
Link to Posting
From Legal Informatics Blog
We invite submission of papers on modelling policy-making. Below, we outline the intended audience, context, the topics of interest, and submission details.
Context
We live in an age where citizens are beginning to demand greater transparency and accountability of their political leaders. Furthermore, those who govern and decide on policy are beginning to realise the need for new governance models that emphasise deliberative democracy and promote widespread public participation in all phases of the policy-making cycle: 1) agenda set-
ting, 2) policy analysis, 3) lawmaking, 4) implementation, and 5) monitoring. As governments must become more ecient and eective with the resources available, modern information and communications technology (ICT)are being drawn on to address problems of information processing in the phases. One of the key problems is policy content analysis and modelling,particularly the gap between on the one hand policy proposals and formulations that are expressed in quantitative and narrative forms and on the
other hand formal models that can be used to systematically represent and reason with the information contained in the proposals and formulations.
Special Issue Theme
The editors invite submissions of original research about the application of ICT and Computer Science to the rst three phases of the policy cycle agenda setting, policy analysis, and lawmaking. The research should seek to address the gap noted above. The journal volume focuses particularly on using and integrating a range of subcomponents information extraction, text processing,
representation, modelling, simulation, reasoning, and argument to provide policy making tools to the public and public administrators. While submissions about tool development and practice are welcome, the editors particularly encourage submission of articles that address formal, conceptual, and/or computational issues. Some specificc topics within the theme are:
information extraction from natural language text
policy ontologies
formal logical representations of policies
transformations from policy language to executable policy rules
argumentation about policy proposals
web-based tools that support participatory policy-making
tools for public understanding of arguments behind policy decisions
visualising policies and arguments about policies
computational models of policies and arguments about policies
integration tools
multi-agent policy simulations
Submission Details
Authors are invited to submit an original, previously unpublished, research paper of up to 30 pages pertaining to the special issue theme. The paper should follow the journal's instructions for authors and be submitted online. See the dropdown tab under the section FOR AUTHORS AND EDITORS.
Instructions for Authors on:
https://www.springer.com/computer/ai/journal/10506
Submit Online on:
https://www.springer.com/computer/ai/journal/10506
Each submitted paper will be carefully peer-reviewed based on originality, signicance, technical soundness, and clarity of exposition and relevance for the journal.
Contact the special issue editors with any questions.
Link to Posting
From Legal Informatics Blog


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