Dear all,
we announce the second edition of the
Processes, Laws and Compliance Workshop,
co-located with the 23rd Conference on Business Process Management (BPM
2025) to be held in Seville, Spain, from August, 31 to September, 5
Workshop website:
https://plc.di.unito.it/plc-workshop/ WORKSHOP AIM AND SCOPE
The
Processes, Laws and Compliance (PLC) workshop intends to provide a
forum to facilitate the exchange of research findings and ideas on
data-driven and process-oriented techniques and practices in the legal
domain, fostering collaboration among interdisciplinary experts,
researchers, and practitioners working in IT and law.
Research in
legal informatics has grown in recent decades, not least due to the
spread of information systems capable of recording the data of legal
processes (legal event logs), the texts of tenders, and the temporal
dimensions of legal procedures. Artificial Intelligence (AI) techniques
provide a valuable means for analyzing legal processes to gather
valuable insights on legal matters that can support the work of public
administrations and private companies in the legal field.
Examples
of areas that are expected to benefit from the application of AI
techniques, such as Process Mining, Machine Learning, and Natural
Language Processing, are the automated discovery of actual legal
procedures from historical data; the formalization of legal requirements
using process discovery, the verification of regulatory compliance of
procedures; the prediction of the unfolding of on-going legal cases,
among others. At the same time, the implementation of process mining
technologies brings several challenges regarding deployment and
effective use of its outcomes: How to apply these techniques in a
privacy-sensitive manner and how to deal with potential biases from the
predictions are some of those.
TOPICS OF INTEREST
We welcome
contributions related to automated process-oriented analysis and digital
law, as well as considering legal modeling and conceptualization
features.
Potential topics are:
- Discovery of process behavior in legal artifacts (laws, proceedings, guidelines, standards, logs, etc)
- Compliance between formal representations of laws and their implementation
- Variant analysis of different legal process executions?
- Performance analysis in the legal domain
- Predictive analytics on legal cases
- Techniques for modeling and formalization of laws
- NLP and Law
- Visualization and Simplification techniques for legal processes
- Legal reasoning and processes
- Information retrieval and multimedia search for legal documents
- Rules As Code (RaC) approaches for the implementation of compliant-by-design systems
- Emerging applications in legal data & knowledge engineering
SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS
The workshop accepts two categories of submissions: Regular papers and Show & Tell sessions.
Regular papers.
Authors are invited to submit original, previously unpublished research
papers. Submissions are expected to be between 12-15 pages long, and
short papers between 6-11 pages long - including references, appendices,
and figures.
Springer will publish research papers as a
post-workshop proceedings volume in the series Lecture Notes in Business
Information Processing (LNBIP). According to Springer's policy, the
acceptance rate will be lower than or at most equal to 50%
Show & Tell.
In addition, we welcome summaries of work already published or under
submission elsewhere, descriptions of work in progress, tutorials, and
practical experience reports. These categories will not be published but
will have space for presentation. The format of the category is free
and should not exceed 2 pages.
For formatting instructions and templates, see the Springer Web page:
http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html At least one author of each accepted paper must register and participate in the workshop.
Submissions should be made via Easychair through the following submission page:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=bpm2025 (by selecting the PLC workshop)
All submissions must be in English and converted to PDF before electronic submission.
The
organization of a journal special issue dedicated to the workshop
topics is under consideration. If confirmed, a selection of the best
accepted Regular papers will be considered for an extended version of
the special issue.
The workshop's main purpose is to create a
community of scholars in the intersection of process mining and laws.
The authors of accepted papers, after presenting their work, are
invited to to debate in plenum over a central theme in the session, with
the facilitation of the session chair and participants. A keynote
speech at the beginning of the morning session will bring inspiration
for the workshop on relevant topics (e.g. AI and Law).
To finalize
the workshop, the last plenary session will discuss the challenges and
future directions in the BPM and Law research.
IMPORTANT DATES
Deadline to submit Papers to Workshop:
June 6, 2025Acceptance of Papers for Workshop: July 3, 2025
Workshop camera-ready papers: July 11, 2025