Posts Tagged ‘Law school technology’
February 10, 2013
The call for papers and presentation proposals has been issued for LVI 2013: Law via the Internet Conference, to be held 26-27 September 2013 on the Channel Island of Jersey.
The conference Website does not seem to state the deadline for submitting papers or proposals. If you know the submission deadline, please feel free to tell us in the comments to this post.
[UPDATE 11 February 2013: The conference organizers now say the submission deadline is 31 March 2013.]
Papers are invited on the topics covered by any of the seven tracks in which the conference program is divided:
The conference Twitter account is @JerseyLVI2013 and the conference hashtag is #lvi2013
For details about the tracks, please see the track Websites.
For more details about the conference, please see the conference Website.
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Tags:#freelaw, Citizens' use of legal information, Digital legal publishing, Distance learning in law schools, e-learning, e-learning in law schools, Effects of free access to law, Effects of public access to legal information, Electronic legal publishing, Free access to law, Free law, Interdisciplinary legal scholarly communication, Law school technology, Law via the Internet Conference, Lawyers' legal information behavior, Lawyers' use of legal information, Legal document standards, Legal information behavior, Legal information institutes, Legal information retrieval, Legal instructional technology, Legal knowledge extraction, Legal knowledge representation, Legal Linked Data, Legal metadata, Legal natural language processing, Legal ontologies, Legal open government data, Legal publishing, Legal reasoning, Legal scholarly communication, Legal scholarly publishing, Legal semantic web, Legal social media, Linked Data and law, LVI, LVI 2013, lvi2013, Modeling legal reasoning, Natural language processing and law, Online legal publishing, Open access legal publishing, Open access to legal scholarship, Open government, Open justice, Personally identifying information and court records, Personally identifying information in court decisions, Personally identifying information in court records, Personally identifying information in judicial decisions, Personally identifying information in legal documents, Privacy and court decisions, Privacy and court documents, Privacy and court records, Privacy and judicial decisions, Privacy and judicial documents, Privacy and legal information, Public access to legal information, Public legal education, Semantic Web and law, Social media and citizens' use of legal information, Social media and lawyers' legal information behavior, Social media and lawyers' use of legal information, Social media and legal information behavior, Social media and legal publishing, Social media and legal scholarly communication, Social media and public legal education, Web 2.0 and citizens' use of legal information, Web 2.0 and lawyers' legal information behavior, Web 2.0 and lawyers' use of legal information, Web 2.0 and legal information behavior, Web 2.0 and legal publishing, Web 2.0 and legal scholarly communication, Web 2.0 and public legal education
Posted in Calls for papers, Calls for proposals, Conference Announcements | 2 Comments »
July 28, 2012
Tags:#subtech2012, Applied legal instruction, Clinical legal education, Innovation in legal education, International Conference on Substantive Technology in Legal Education and Practice, Law practice innovation, Law practice technology, Law school technology, Legal decision support systems, Legal education reform, Legal expert systems, Legal instructional technology, Practicing law online, Quantitative legal prediction, SubTech, SubTech 2012, Technology and legal ethics, Technology in clinical legal education, Unbundled legal services, Unbundling of legal services, Virtual law practice
Posted in Conference reports, Conference resources | 1 Comment »
July 27, 2012
Tags:#subtech2012, Applied legal instruction, Clinical legal education, Innovation in legal education, International Conference on Substantive Technology in Legal Education and Practice, Law practice innovation, Law practice technology, Law school technology, Legal decision support systems, Legal education reform, Legal expert systems, Legal instructional technology, Practicing law online, Quantitative legal prediction, SubTech, SubTech 2012, Technology and legal ethics, Technology in clinical legal education, Unbundled legal services, Unbundling of legal services, Virtual law practice
Posted in Applications, Conference Announcements, Conference resources | Leave a Comment »
June 20, 2012
Tags:#CALIcon12, CALICon, CALICon 2012, Conference for Law School Computing, Digital legal publishing, Electronic legal publishing, Law school technology, Legal educational technology, Legal instructional technology, Legal open educational resources, Open educational resources
Posted in Conference Announcements | Leave a Comment »
August 25, 2010
Tags:CALI, Law School Tech Talk, Law school technology, Legal instructional technology, Legal social media, Legal technology podcasts, Legal Web 2.0, Web 2.0 and law
Posted in Applications, podcasts, Technology developments, Technology tools | 1 Comment »
April 23, 2010
A call for proposals — with submission deadline of 15 May 2010 — has been issued for CALICon 2010: The 20th Annual Conference for Law School Computing, to be held 24-26 June 2010, at the Rutgers-Camden School of Law in Camden, New Jersey, USA.
The conference is organized by CALI: The Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction. The conference theme is “Reboot Legal Education.”
Click here to see accepted proposals.
For more information, please see the call for proposals.
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Tags:CALI, CALICon, CALICon 2010, Law school technology, Legal informatics conferences, Legal instructional technology
Posted in Calls for papers, Conference Announcements | Leave a Comment »
January 14, 2010
Registration is now open for ESCon 2010: The 2010 Law School Admission Council (LSAC) Electronic Services Conference, to be held 13-15 April 2010 in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA.
“Sessions will focus on the paperless admission process and a variety of other timely topics, from social networking and blogging to improving collaboration and communication among IT and admission staff.”
Click here for the tentative schedule.
For more information, please see the conference Website.
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Tags:ESCon, ESCon 2010, Law School Admission Council, Law school admissions technology, Law school student services technology, Law school technology, Legal informatics conferences, Legal instructional technology, Legal social media, Legal social networks, LSAC, LSAC Electronic Services Conference, Web 2.0 and law, Web 2.0 and law school
Posted in Conference Announcements | Leave a Comment »