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[ecrea] Call for participation: Open Legislative Data in Paris II- Time Has Come for Law Tracking
Sat Mar 01 10:05:33 GMT 2014
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
Wednesday, May 28th, 2014
Sciences Po
Paris
Open Legislative Data in Paris II
Time Has Come for Law Tracking
Organized by The Law Factory (Regards Citoyens and Sciences Po)
Open Legislative Data is a term mixing Open Data (the idea that public
data should be made freely available to anyone for re-use and
redistribution) & Legislative Studies (the academic study of parliaments
and legislators).
The Law Factory is a French group composed of hacktivists (Regards
Citoyens) and academics (Centre d’études européennes & Médialab Sciences
Po). In July 2012, we organized a first conference in Paris about
Parliamentary informatics.
Following the same tradition we will organize in May 2014, a second
conference mainly focused on law tracking. The aim is to:
Discuss, present and compare the latest developments regarding law
tracking, i.e. the visualization and analysis of the legislative
procedure through computer analysis.
Reassemble two groups that rarely communicate: the academic world
of legislative studies and individuals and organizations from across the
open data and parliamentary informatics spectrum.
Tell me more
Two years ago, we organized in Paris an international conference, which
gathered more than 100 participants fromacademics and practitioners to
activists and technical experts. More about this conference can be found
on our website:
http://www.lafabriquedelaloi.fr/conference/follow-up/
The next conference Open Legislative Data In Paris II will focus on
process tracking of legislation. The many changes which affect bills
during the parliamentary legislative procedure is still, to a large
extent, a black box. We know that things happen in parliaments, that
bills are amended and in some cases fully altered, but we still don’t
know exactly to which extent and why.
Three reasons may explain why the black box is still there. Firstly, the
legislative process is complex. Thousands of amendments, several stages
of readings (committee & floor) and, in many cases, the shuttle between
2 chambers of the parliament: everything seems to be done to get you
lost. Secondly, the data produced throughout the legislative process is
hardly accessible: some information is easy to find (like plenary
amendments), some is only partially there (like committee debates) and
some is just hidden (like lobbies inputs). Finally, process tracking of
legislation has not really been, so far, the focus of people interested
in parliament'sbusiness. Legislative studies scholars have been more
interested in studying votes over legislation than actual contents of
legislation. Hacktivists have been first and foremost known for
monitoring MPs individual activities - such individual focus being not
well fitted for understanding law-making, a collective process if there
is one.
Few has been done with new technologies to understand how parliaments
(re)write bills. There are good reasons to believe that time has come to
do so: programmers have now the capacity to deal with gigantic corpora
of data, parliaments have been more and more pushed to open their data,
parliamentary monitoring websites have prepared citizens to understand
and analyze legislative “serious” activities, and, last but not least,
assessing the actual role of parliaments in law production is a
prerequisite for understanding the quality of any democracy. We know
that in modern democracies, law is not fully written in parliament and
that the executive branch benefits from privileged tools for initiating
(in Europe) or vetoing (in America)legislation. Yet, there is lack of
systematic knowledge about what remains to parliaments, in which cases
and in which policy fields.
Yes, the time has come to open the black box of parliaments’ legislative
activities.
What kind of topics will becovered?
We welcome proposals on any aspects of law tracking in parliaments
linked to the use of computer science, be it in order to present
existing projects, to explore new tools, to discuss their effects, to
analyze legislatures through open parliamentary data…
Special attention will be given to the following areas:
The technical challenges of tracking bills in parliaments. How do
we deal with missing data? Should committees and floor amendments be
treated the same? How do we connect the versions of the bills with the
mountains of amendments? What should be done with the so numerous failed
amendments?
The esthetical challenges of tracking bills in parliaments. Which
kind of visualization is optimal for making sense of a process as
manifold as law making? Where should the focus be placed? How can
digital design help?
The ethical challenges of tracking bills in parliaments. Does the
treatment of big corpora of legislative data really tell us something
about the quality of a given democracy? Is it possible, for instance, to
specify patterns of lobbying through law tracking?
All the presentations will be held in English
How do I get involved?
We welcome different kind of presentations from individual or groups,
from academics or hacktivists… or both!
You can participate in two ways:
Lightning presentations (5 minutes)
Talks (10-15 minutes)
You’ll find an on-line application form here:
http://www.lafabriquedelaloi.fr/submit-a-proposal/
Application must be sent before March 15th 2014!
We’ve also got a dedicated mailing list for discussions around the
conference which you can write to: (TheLawFactory /at/ ml.regardscitoyens.org).
If you’d like to join the discussion, sign up by sending an empty e-mail
to (TheLawFactory-subscribe /at/ ml.regardscitoyens.org).
Can I ask for a grant?
Yes! The Ile-de-France Region is the main sponsor for the conference. We
offer limited funding for international participants in order to cover
part of their travel and accommodation fees.
Application must be sent before March 15th 2014. Answers will be
provided by April 30th2014.
Can I sponsor the event?
Yes please! We are still actively seeking sponsorship for lunches,
coffee, travel and accommodation for international participants and so
on. If you think you might be interested, please contact Angela Tacea at
(picri /at/ regardscitoyens.org) to find out more about the sponsorship
opportunities available.
Where do I find more?
http://www.lafabriquedelaloi.fr/
http://www.regardscitoyens.org/
http://www.medialab.sciences-po.fr/
http://www.cee.sciences-po.fr/
http://www.iledefrance.fr/
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