Besides the standard conference track and the Doctoral Consortium, JURIX 2016 will host a number
of workshops and tutorials related to the theme of the conference.
- Workshops provide an informal setting where participants have the opportunity to discuss specific topics in an atmosphere that fosters the active exchange of ideas.
- Tutorials enable attendees to familiarize themselves with advances in AI and Law related subjects, both theoretical and technological.
JURIX 2016 welcomes workshops and tutorials that address topics that satisfy the following criteria:
- the topic falls in the general scope of JURIX 2016,
- there is a clear focus on a specific technology, problem or application, and
- there is a sufficiently large community interested in the topic.
Note that in the case of multiple workshop/tutorial submissions on the same topic, you may be asked to merge your proposal with that of others.
Workshop Proposal Guidelines
We invite submissions of workshop proposals on subjects related to the main conference (see the call for papers).
Proposals should be sent to the Program Chair via email. The deadline for workshop proposals is Sunday, 11 September 2016.
A workshop proposal should be a short PDF document (max 5 pages) outlining the following ingredients:
- Title
- Organizers (more than 2, from different institutions)
- Abstract
- Motivation for the workshop (relation to conference, timeliness)
- Workshop format (paper presentations, panel discussions, invited talks, general discussions
- outbreak). We welcome and prioritize workshops with an innovative, creative format that
- ll attract various types of contributions and ensures lively interaction.
- Indication as to whether it is a half-day or full-day workshop
- Intended audience and expected number of participants
- List of (potential) members of the program committee (25% confirmed)
- Submission, notification and camera-ready deadline dates aligned with the ones listed in the ‘Important Dates’ section below
- If applicable, past versions of the workshop, including URLs and statistics on submissions/papers/attendance
If accepted, the workshop organizers are responsible for:
- A workshop webpage, with links to the JURIX 2016 website
- Publicize the workshop to attract submissions and attendees
- Reviewing of submitted papers, and quality assurance
- Determining the program for the workshop, within the time limits provided by the conference organization
- Publishing accepted papers in electronic proceedings before the workshop date (preferably CEUR-WS)
- Ensure that workshop participants register for the workshop and the main conference
- Schedule, attend and coordinate the workshop.
Tutorial Proposal Guidelines
We invite submissions of tutorial proposals on subjects related to the main conference (see the call for papers). Proposals should be sent to the Program Chair. The deadline for tutorial proposals is Sunday, 11 September 2016.
A tutorial proposal should be a short PDF document (max 5 pages) outlining the following ingredients:
- Title
- Organizers (more than 2, from different institutions)
- Abstract
- Motivation for the tutorial (relation to conference, timeliness)
- If the tutorial, or a very similar tutorial, has been given elsewhere, explanation of the benefit of presenting it again to the JURIX community.
- Overview of content, description of the aims, presentation style, potential/preferred prerequisite knowledge.
- Indication as to whether it is a half-day or full-day workshop.
- Intended audience and expected number of participants
If accepted, the tutorial organizers are responsible for:
- A tutorial webpage, with links to the JURIX 2016 website
- Publicize the tutorial to attract submissions and attendees
- Determining the tutorial for the workshop, within the time limits provided by the conference organization.
- Distributing tutorial materials to attendees before the tutorial date (if needed)
- Ensure that tutorial participants register for the tutorial and the main conference.
- Schedule, attend and coordinate the tutorial.