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2.2 - Information Intermediation

from A - Information Representation, Preprocessing, and Document Assembly

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 February 2021

Daniel Martin Katz
Affiliation:
Chicago-Kent College of Law
Ron Dolin
Affiliation:
Harvard Law School, Massachusetts
Michael J. Bommarito
Affiliation:
Stanford CodeX
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Summary

The storage, description, collection, organization, and selection of legal information is central to a legal system, whether public or private, professional or lay person, structured or unstructured, textual or non-textual. The ability to get timely information where it is needed is as important to law as it is to any other field, given that law is a system of written rules and procedures. Ignorantia juris non excusat – ignorance of the law is no excuse. But where citizens seek to know the law and cannot find it, they have a right to question its legitimacy, at least as applied to them. The function of the reference librarian within a brick and mortar library, while still invaluable, does not scale to the magnitude of the problem. Technological information intermediation, such as a search engine, can thus be increasingly viewed as a necessary component of a modern legal system, and familiarity with the basic concepts is an important tool in the legal technologist’s toolkit.

Type
Chapter
Information
Legal Informatics , pp. 41 - 54
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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