[CFP]: 4th international workshop Knowledge Management and Process Mining for Law (KM4LAW)

KM4LAW


Engineering & Computer Science (General)



Dear all,

we announce the 4th International Workshop on KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT AND PROCESS MINING FOR LAW (KM4LAW).



Co-located with the 15th International Conference on Formal Ontology in Information Systems (FOIS 2025), 8-12 September 2025, Catania (Italy)



WORKSHOP WEBSITE

https://km4law.di.unito.it 



WORKSHOP AIM AND SCOPE

The academic interest in legal informatics has been increasing over the last decades. The application of innovative technologies for processing legal documents and AI methods applied to legal issues can support the work of public administrations and private companies in the legal field. Informatics facilitates access to and understandability of legal knowledge, including judgments, recommendations, legislation, citizens’ constitutional rights, and soft law. Legal ontologies, for instance, highlight the nature of links between legal norms; the application of specific algorithms supports semi-automatic interpretation of legal provisions and prediction of judicial decisions.



A recent research line is engaged with transformers and Large Language Models (LLMs) techniques applied in the legal domain. These models are becoming integral to legal work, as they have demonstrated effectiveness in several tasks, encompassing manifold research lines.  These include, but are not limited to, the design and evaluation of LLM-based systems and applications in legal data processing; the use of LLMs in conventional legal text processing tasks such as summarization, question-answering, classification, and judgment prediction; issues related to LLMs-enabled decision making; and the application of LLMs in the analysis of multilingual legal data.



Moreover, organisations' information systems collect information related to notices and other legal documents, and are increasingly used for automated analysis with discovery and flow compliance checking, process mining with structured and unstructured data. 

The analysis of legal event logs can be developed through the adoption of Process Mining (PM) techniques, which allow the discovery of procedures from real data, to verify the regulatory compliance of procedures, for application monitoring and prediction techniques about the events of a legal case.



Digital justice and digital law improve the daily work of public administrations, judges and law firms by speeding up the resolution of legal issues, including support for legal compliance and access to complex and extensive legal knowledge. 



The Knowledge Management and process mining for Law (KM4LAW) workshop intends to be a forum to focus on legal informatics from a broad perspective.

This workshop focuses on the wide-ranging topic of AI, KM, IE, and PM methods in the legal informatics and legal-linguistics fields. AI & Law involves a variety of sub-domains, including ontologies, argumentation, legal design, legal prediction, network analysis, and neural networks. The challenging task of automatically extracting knowledge in textual documents has traditionally been addressed by NLP techniques. Given the complexity and vagueness of legal sources, extracted knowledge can be formalised into ontological models for many purposes, including access to rights and understandability of requirements in administrative procedures.



This workshop is intended to be a forum bringing together all these sub-disciplines. FOIS is the perfect venue for this forum because all these subjects are involved in this conference. Please note that all presenters must be on-site.



TOPICS OF INTEREST

We welcome contributions related to digital justice and digital law in general, as well as considering modelling and conceptualization features. Potential topics are:

Natural language processing techniques and systems for legal documents

Identification of legal semantic roles and extraction of named entities

Application, design, evaluation and impact of Large Language Models (LLMs) in the legal domain

Automated knowledge extraction from legal text corpora

Experimental results using and adapting NLP methods for legal data

Information retrieval and multimedia search for legal documents

Process mining for legal compliance

Mining legal event logs for process discovery 

Predictive process monitoring on legal cases

Multilingual alignments, retrieval, extraction and analysis of legal sources

Linked data and knowledge graphs in the legal domain

Classification or clustering of law

Domain-Specific Visual Modeling Language (DSVML) and law

Legal ontologies, visual law, legal design, and correlated themes

(Multilingual) Thesauri, vocabularies, and taxonomies in the legal area

Entity Recognition and Disambiguation

Training and Using Embeddings for legal text

Computational models of argumentation for legal data

Knowledge Base Population

Question Answering

Dialogue and Discourse Analysis

Query Understanding

Link Analysis, Relation and Event Extraction

Combining Legal Text with Structured Data

Legal Text Summarization and Generation

Emerging applications in legal data & knowledge engineering



SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS

Authors are invited to submit original, previously unpublished research papers. Papers should be written in English. All papers must be converted to PDF prior to electronic submission.

Papers' template CEUR-ART, 1-column style (please use Latex):

-Instructions: https://ceur-ws.org/HOWTOSUBMIT.html

-Overleaf: https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/template-for-submissions-to-ceur-workshop-proceedings-ceur-ws-dot-org/wqyfdgftmcfw 



We accept two kinds of contributions:

- short paper [ between 5 to 9 pages long ]

- regular paper [ between 10 to 14 pages long ]



At least one author of each accepted paper must register and participate in the workshop.

Submissions should be made via Easychair through the following submission page: 

https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=fois2025   

[ select “WS: Knowledge Management and Process Mining for Law” track ]



IMPORTANT DATES

Deadline to submit Papers to Workshops: June 1, 2025

Workshop paper author notification: 14 July, 2025

Provide camera-ready versions (strict): September 1, 2025

Workshop at FOIS 2025 days: (TBD) 8-9 September 2025



WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS (in alphabetical order)

Davide Audrito, University of Bologna (Italy)

Francesca Grasso, University of Turin (Italy)

Roberto Nai, University of Turin (Italy)

Emilio Sulis, University of Turin (Italy)