Experience Report: How to Design Web-Based Competitions for Legal Proceedings: Lessons from a Court Case

Author(s):  
Aad Van Moorsel ◽  
Matthew Forshaw ◽  
Francisco Rocha
Author(s):  
Lizhi Liao ◽  
Jinfu Chen ◽  
Heng Li ◽  
Yi Zeng ◽  
Weiyi Shang ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 22-45
Author(s):  
Delia Douglas

This project examines a Canadian court case that involves the largest arson homicide in the history of Vancouver, British Columbia. In May 2006 a fire killed four members of a Congolese refugee family (Adela Etibako and three of her children, Benedicta, Edita, and Stephane) along with Ashley Singh, the South Asian girlfriend of the target and sole survivor of the fire, Bolingo Etibako. On October 5, 2008 the accused, Nathan Fry, a 20-year-old white male, was found guilty of five counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder. Fry received an automatic life sentence without the possibility of parole for 25 years. This paper considers this crime and the legal proceedings as a case study that can further our understanding of discourses of race, racism, and citizenship in Canada, and their link to Mbembe’s (2003) notion of necropolitics, what he terms as the politics of life and death. I argue that the viciousness of the crime, an offense involving a white male perpetrator and victims all of whom are racialized as Black and Brown, reflects the embodied practices and psychological processes that are both emblematic of, and integral to, the violence of coloniality, and the racial relations and structural arrangements of present-day white settler society (Martinot, 2010; Razack, 2002, 2005). I show how the crime, the investigation, and the trial communicate symbolically and materially what bell hooks (1992) characterizes as the “terrorizing force of white supremacy” (p. 344).


Author(s):  
C. M. Sperberg-McQueen

The Trials of the Late Roman Republic (TLRR) project is building an XML database with information about criminal and civil legal proceedings in the period 149 to 50 BC; it is a revision of a work first published in book form in 1991. TLRR is a SAND: a small, arcane, non-trivial dataset. It exhibits in acute form problems also seen in other XML projects and offers a convenient medium for experimenting with solutions to those problems, including partial and uncertain data, relatively heavy annotation of data by means of notes, potential links to other resources with information about people and other entities appearing in TLRR, a distributed project team, and sparse resources. The paper describes the initial translation of the data into XML form and the stepwise refinement of the markup, the creation of Web-based XML editing interfaces for the data, and the treatment of uncertain data in query interfaces.


1999 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-12
Author(s):  
Bahira Sherif

The following article represents my testimony in a federal court case held in October 1994 in Philadelphia, PA. At the point when I was asked to participate in the case, the defendant had already been found guilty but was asking for leniency in sentencing under a clause in the law that allows for the consideration of cultural factors. I, in my capacity as a cultural anthropologist with an expertise in the Middle East, was called on as an expert witness to testify on the possible consequences of a father's incarceration on the lives of his daughters. This paper illustrates how anthropologists can contribute to legal proceedings that incorporate a cultural defense.


1998 ◽  
Vol 62 (9) ◽  
pp. 671-674
Author(s):  
JF Chaves ◽  
JA Chaves ◽  
MS Lantz
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 82-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva van Leer

Mobile tools are increasingly available to help individuals monitor their progress toward health behavior goals. Commonly known commercial products for health and fitness self-monitoring include wearable devices such as the Fitbit© and Nike + Pedometer© that work independently or in conjunction with mobile platforms (e.g., smartphones, media players) as well as web-based interfaces. These tools track and graph exercise behavior, provide motivational messages, offer health-related information, and allow users to share their accomplishments via social media. Approximately 2 million software programs or “apps” have been designed for mobile platforms (Pure Oxygen Mobile, 2013), many of which are health-related. The development of mobile health devices and applications is advancing so quickly that the Food and Drug Administration issued a Guidance statement with the purpose of defining mobile medical applications and describing a tailored approach to their regulation.


2008 ◽  
Vol 41 (8) ◽  
pp. 23
Author(s):  
MITCHEL L. ZOLER
Keyword(s):  

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