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ICEGOV 2021 – Paper Session 3


Wednesday, 6 October 2021 | 11:00 - 13:00 | Room Apollo [B3]


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Privacy, security, legal informatics, and ethics in digital governance

As digital technologies penetrate every area and domain of the public sector, society investigates the extent to which regulation is needed to ensure that this new phenomenon is an advantage rather than a threat. This track discusses privacy, security, legal informatics, and the ethical dilemmas associated with the proper use of the “traditional”, as well as the use of emerging and disruptive digital technologies such as AI, IoT, Blockchain, Big Data processing, among others. Emphasis may be placed on privacy protection and security, both regarding traditional regulatory frameworks, such as GDPR or ISO 27000, or self-regulating approaches, practices, and technologies for promoting privacy protection and security in digital governance. As digital technologies have a significant impact on legislation creation and access, there is increasing interest and emphasis on “digitisation ready” legislation, legal text mining, legal XML standards and models, legal ontologies, as well as further argumentation and reasoning models and approaches towards more automated legal services and information systems. New tools, practical and theoretical approaches, frameworks and case studies concerning the ethical and secure use of digital technologies that respect privacy are also part of this track.


ACCEPTED PAPERS

Note that paper titles and authors are shown here as extracted from the conference paper management system (EDAS). The accuracy of the provided data is the responsibility of the author(s). [A] denotes a presentation in Athens; [O] denotes an online presentation.

#1 [A] - A literature review on digital ethics from a humanistic and sustainable perspective by Luis Teran, Jhonny Pincay, Ivo Wallimann-Helmer, Edy Portmann

#2 [A] - Clustering legal artifacts using text mining by Zoi Lachana, Michalis Avgerinos Loutsaris, Charalampos Alexopoulos, Yannis Charalabidis

#3 [A] - Embedding personal data minimization technologies in organizations: needs, vision and artifacts by Mortaza S. Bargh, Ronald Meijer, Susan van den Braak, Alexander Latenko, Marco Vink, Sunil Choenni

#4 [A] - A methodology for evaluating advanced legal data infrastructures by Shefali Virkar, Loukis Euripides, Charalampos Alexopoulos

#5 [O] - Fostering trust through ethical data sharing by Rooksana Rajab


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SESSION CHAIRS / SPEAKERS


Shefali Virkar
Vienna University of Economics and Business
(Austria)
Lilian Mitrou
University of the Aegean
(Greece)

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