Voci:
0. Legal informatics: theory, systematics, applications and relations 0.1. Legal informatics in general 0.1.1. Theory 0.1.2. Systematics 0.1.3. Terminology 0.1.4. Others 0.2. Legal informatics: special questions 0.2.1. Analysis of legal language by computers 0.2.2. Legal information and legal information retrieval systems 0.2.3. Artificial intelligence and legal reasoning 0.2.4. Decision theory. Judicial and administrative decision prediction, and judicial behaviour 0.2.5. Formalization of legal language. Symbolic logic and law 0.2.6. Others 0.3. Legal informatics related to other disciplines 0.3.1. Computer science. Informatics 0.3.2. Information science. Documentation science 0.3.3. Cybernetics 0.3.4. Philosophy. Logic. Mathematics 0.3.5. Linguistics. Semiology 0.3.6. Social, human and behavioural sciences (psychology, sociology, statistics, etc.) 0.3.7. Economics 0.3.8. Jurisprudence 0.3.8.1. Theory of law 0.3.8.2. Philosophy of law. Legal logic 0.3.8.3. Sociology of law 0.3.8.4. History of law 0.3.9. Others 0.4. Reference works on legal informatics 0.4.1. Directories, guides and inventories 0.4.2. Bibliographies 0.4.3. Dictionaries 0.4.4. Encyclopedias 0.4.5. Handbooks and manuals 0.4.6. Others (e.g. reference services, miscellaneous works, proceedings of conferences and congresses) 1. Automation in the state and international organizations 1.0. General 1.1. Automation in central and territorial legislatures 1.1.0. General 1.1.1. Legislative reapportionment and redistricting 1.1.2. Computers as an aid to legislatures 1.1.3. Computerized legislative drafting 1.1.4. Parliamentary information retrieval systems 1.1.5. Computers in parliamentary administration 1.1.6. Others 1.2. Automation in judicial administration 1.2.0. General 1.2.1. Administration of the courts (allocation of hearings, constitution of benches, legal statistics) 1.2.2. Judicial information retrieval systems (criminal records, computer-aided evaluating of evidence) 1.2.3. Legal information retrieval systems 1.2.4. Analysis and forecasting of decisions 1.2.5. Computer-aided decision process 1.2.6. Computers in correctional institutions 1.2.7. Others 1.3. Automation in central and local governments 1.3.0. General 1.3.1. Automation of administrative procedures (administrative automation) 1.3.1.0 Residents' records (registration of births, deaths, marriages and residence) 1.3.1.1. Taxation, auditing and financial affairs 1.3.1.2. Personnel records 1.3.1.3. Real estate and property registers 1.3.1.4. Hospital administration and health services 1.3.1.5. Social insurance and other social services 1.3.1.6. Transport and traffic regulation 1.3.1.7. Patent and trade mark documentation 1.3.1.8. Integration and coordination in administrative automation 1.3.1.9. Others (postal administration, public works, etc.) 1.3.2. Automation of planning processes 1.3.2.1. Edp-supported legislative planning (data banks, data bases) 1.3.2.2. Edp-supported planning of administration (statistics, data banks, data bases, planning information systems, etc.) 1.3.2.3. Fields of application (e.g. regional and urban planning) 1.3.3. Organization and structure of administrative automation 1.3.3.1. Computer centres 1.3.3.2. Administrative cooperation 1.3.3.3. Others 1.3.4. Simulation and decision-making models 1.3.5. Automated drafting of administrative measures 1.3.6. Administrative information retrieval systems 1.3.7. Others 1.4. Automation in public organizations and institutions 1.4.0. General 1.4.1. Edp-supported procedures (management, personnel, accounting) 1.4.2. Edp-supported planning processes 1.4.3. Information retrieval systems 1.4.4. Organization and structure of information services (libraries, documentation centres, archives, etc.) 1.4.5. Others 1.5. Automation in police administration 1.5.0. General 1.5.1. Use of computers by police and criminologists 1.5.2. Others 1.6. Automation in military administration 1.7. Automation in international organizations 1.8. Others 2. Computers in the legal profession and in legal education 2.0. General 2.1. Computerized legal information research and retrieval 2.1.0. General 2.1.1. Case and statutory law research and retrieval 2.1.2. Patent information research and retrieval 2.1.3. Trade mark and trade name information research and retrieval 2.1.4. Administrative decision research and retrieval 2.1.5. Others 2.2. Computers in law office management 2.2.0. General 2.2.1. Automated forms, computerized legal drafting 2.2.2. Others 2.3. Computers as an aid in pre-trial discovery and trial presentation 2.4. Computers in a law practice 2.4.0. General 2.4.1. Computerized standard contracts 2.4.2. Computerized standard notarial acts 2.4.3. Others 2.5. Computers in legal education 2.6. Others 3. Computer law and information law: legal issues in informatics 3.0. International and EEC law aspects 3.0.1. Sources of international and EEC law (treaties and conventions relating to computer law) 3.0.2. Computer criminality 3.0.3. Contracts for hardware, software and computer services 3.0.4. Antitrust and trade regulation 3.0.5. Industrial and intellectual property 3.0.6. Data protection 3.0.7. Transborder data flow 3.0.8. Others 3.1. Constitutional law aspects 3.1.1. Freedom of opinion and information, fundamental rights 3.1.2. Separation of powers 3.1.3. Conflicts of competence (e.g. state/municipalities) 3.1.4. Others 3.2. Administrative law aspects 3.2.1. Tax law 3.2.2. Legal regulation of computer centres 3.2.3. Legal regulation of other computer uses 3.2.4. Others 3.3. Criminal law aspects 3.3.1. Computer criminality 3.3.2. Others 3.4. Civil law aspects 3.4.1. Contracts for hardware, software and computer services 3.4.1.1. Lease and purchase of hardware 3.4.1.2. Limitations of liability warranties 3.4.1.3. Acceptance on examination, maintenance, party responsibility 3.4.1.4. Others 3.4.2. Other questions of civil law 3.4.2.1. Tort law, general 3.4.2.2. Non-use of computers 3.4.2.3. Negligent use of computers 3.4.2.4. Others 3.5. Commercial law aspects 3.5.1. Antitrust and trade regulation 3.5.2. Industrial and intellectual property 3.5.2.1. Copyright protection 3.5.2.2. Patent law protection 3.5.2.3. Trade mark protection and others 3.5.3. Corporate law 3.5.4. Others 3.6. Labour law aspects 3.6.1. Individuals 3.6.2. Organizations 3.6.3. Worker safety and labour accident insurance 3.6.4. Others 3.7. Data protection. Problems of privacy and computers 3.7.1. General, legal, technical, economic and sociological aspects 3.7.2. Legal regulation of data processing 3.7.2.1. Data protection legislation in general 3.7.2.2. Data protection in the public sector 3.7.2.3. Data protection in the private sector 3.7.3. Data protection in special fields of computer application 3.7.3.1. Health services 3.7.3.2. Social services 3.7.3.3. Education 3.7.3.4. Media and other intermediary organizations 3.7.3.5. The economy and private firms 3.7.3.6. State networks and the economy 3.7.3.7. Other fields of data protection 3.7.4. Interested party's rights 3.7.4.1. Right to demand and get information. Right of access 3.7.4.2. Right of rectification and counterstatement 3.7.4.3. Right of cancellation 3.7.4.4. Damages and indemnity (compensation) 3.7.4.5. Other rights (e.g. publication) 3.7.5. Technical and organizational measures for data protection 3.7.6. Control of data processing 3.7.7. Costs of data protection 3.7.8. Data protection in a wider sense. Problems of information balance 3.7.9. Others 3.8. Data processing security 3.8.1. General, legal, technical and economic aspects 3.8.2. Responsibility for data security 3.8.3. Data security measures 3.8.3.1. Hardware-technical measures 3.8.3.2. Software-technical measures 3.8.3.3. Organizational measures 3.8.3.4. Personnel measures 3.8.3.5. Construction measures 3.8.3.6. Special measures for data teleprocessing 3.8.3.7. Other measures 3.8.4. Costs of data security 3.8.5. Others 3.9. Automation-oriented legislation 4. Sociological, political, educational and economic issues in automation and in legal informatics 4.0. General 4.1. Sociological issues 4.1.0. General 4.1.1. Information-related problems 4.1.2. Information needs 4.1.3. User requirements 4.1.4. Social evaluation of computer use 4.1.5. Industrial sociology, sociology of information science 4.1.6. Information processing and society 4.1.7. Others 4.2. Political issues 4.2.0. General 4.2.1. Labour and economics law (marketing rules, labour market, etc.) 4.2.2. Other legal questions 4.2.3. Questions of legal policy 4.2.4. Questions of information and informatics policy. National and international organization of information and informatics 4.2.5. Others 4.3. Educational issues 4.3.0. General 4.3.1. Theory-oriented courses 4.3.2. Technical and practical courses 4.3.3. Courses in legal informatics 4.3.4. Others 4.4. Economic issues 4.4.0. General 4.4.1. National planning and government intervention 4.4.2. Informatics industry (electronic, computer and communications industry) 4.4.3. Consulting services 4.4.4. Computer market 4.4.5. Others 5. Computers in specialized areas (research, industry, business, etc.) 5.0. General 5.1. Computers in selected areas 5.1.0. Computers in medicine (medical data banks, computer-aided diagnosis) 5.1.1. Computers in education (teaching and training) 5.1.2. Computers in the social, human and behavioural sciences (economics, statistics, psychology, sociology, etc.) 5.1.3. Computers in linguistics (natural and artificial languages, automated translation, etc.) 5.1.4. Computers in art, games and sports 5.1.5. Computers as authors and inventors 5.1.6. Computers in transport and traffic regulation 5.1.7. Computers in planning, land use control and ecology 5.1.8. Others 5.2. Computers in industry 5.2.0. General 5.2.1. Computers in publishing and printing industries 5.2.2. Computers in communication industries 5.2.3. Computers in real estate and building industries 5.2.4. Computers in energy-related industries 5.2.5. Others 5.3. Computers in business 5.3.0. General 5.3.1. Computers in banks, banking, money and credit 5.3.2. Computers in accounting and auditing 5.3.3. Computers in insurance 5.3.4. Computers in securities 5.3.5. Computers in management and business planning 5.3.6. Others (advertising, marketing, retailing, etc.) 5.4. Computers in other macro-organizations 5.4.0. General 5.4.1. Computers in communication media (newspapers and magazines, radio, television and motion pictures) 5.4.2. Computers in political parties 5.4.3. Computers in trade-unions 5.4.4. Computers in pressure groups 5.4.5. Others 6. Documentation science developments significant to the legal community 6.0. General 6.1. Information analysis 6.2. Classification (universal decimal classification, faceted classification, etc.) 6.3. Thesauri 6.4. Indexing 6.5. Abstracting 6.6. Data collection, data bases, data banks 6.7. Standardization of data 6.8. Data communication and information dissemination (information flow, information transmission, telecommunications, teleinformatics, etc.) 6.9. Others 7. Computer and information science developments significant to the legal community 7.1. Computer science developments 7.1.0. General 7.1.1. Hardware 7.1.1.0. General (analog, digital, hybrid computers; digital storage systems; computer electronics) 7.1.1.1. Peripherals (input, output devices) 7.1.1.2. Minicomputers 7.1.1.3. Others 7.1.2. Selected topics 7.1.2.0. Programming and software (programs, routines and subroutines) 7.1.2.1. Time-sharing and remote access 7.1.2.2. Electro-optical technology 7.1.2.3. Voice recognition systems 7.1.2.4. Microfilm and computer output on microfilm (COM) 7.1.2.5. Computer graphics 7.1.2.6. Others 7.1.3. Computer performance 7.1.4. Computer science of the future 7.1.5. Others 7.2. Information science developments 7.2.0. General 7.2.1. Theory of informatics 7.2.2. Artificial intelligence (bionics; game playing; learning and adaptation; pattern recognition; theorem proving; thinking) 7.2.3. Computerized abstracting 7.2.4. Information theory (included theory and processing of signals) 7.2.5. Game theory, graph theory, system theory, simulation theory (included forecasting techniques) 7.2.6. Theory of programming 7.2.7. Computer mathematics 7.2.8. Information systems (theory, analysis and problems) 7.2.9. Others 8. General articles, surveys, reference works, miscellaneous works 8.1. Articles and surveys of general interest 8.2. Reference works (directories, guides and inventories; bibliographies; dictionaries; encyclopedias; handbooks and manuals; reference services; etc.) 8.3. Proceedings of conferences and congresses 8.4. Collection of articles