Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (4)
- Human Rights Law (3)
- Immigration Law (3)
- Social Justice (3)
- International Law (2)
-
- Juvenile Law (2)
- Artificial Intelligence and Robotics (1)
- Arts and Humanities (1)
- Business (1)
- Cataloging and Metadata (1)
- Computational Linguistics (1)
- Computer Sciences (1)
- Databases and Information Systems (1)
- International Relations (1)
- Labor and Employment Law (1)
- Law and Philosophy (1)
- Law and Politics (1)
- Legal Studies (1)
- Legal Theory (1)
- Library and Information Science (1)
- Linguistics (1)
- Philosophy (1)
- Physical Sciences and Mathematics (1)
- Political Science (1)
- Political Theory (1)
- Public Law and Legal Theory (1)
- Rule of Law (1)
- Keyword
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Law
Creating Data From Unstructured Text With Context Rule Assisted Machine Learning (Craml), Stephen Meisenbacher, Peter Norlander
Creating Data From Unstructured Text With Context Rule Assisted Machine Learning (Craml), Stephen Meisenbacher, Peter Norlander
School of Business: Faculty Publications and Other Works
Popular approaches to building data from unstructured text come with limitations, such as scalability, interpretability, replicability, and real-world applicability. These can be overcome with Context Rule Assisted Machine Learning (CRAML), a method and no-code suite of software tools that builds structured, labeled datasets which are accurate and reproducible. CRAML enables domain experts to access uncommon constructs within a document corpus in a low-resource, transparent, and flexible manner. CRAML produces document-level datasets for quantitative research and makes qualitative classification schemes scalable over large volumes of text. We demonstrate that the method is useful for bibliographic analysis, transparent analysis of proprietary data, …
The Role Of Recognition In Kelsen's Account Of Legal Obligation And Political Duty, David Ingram
The Role Of Recognition In Kelsen's Account Of Legal Obligation And Political Duty, David Ingram
Philosophy: Faculty Publications and Other Works
Kelsen’s critique of absolute sovereignty famously appeals to a basic norm of international recognition. However, in his discussion of legal obligation, generally speaking, he notoriously rejects mutual recognition as having any normative consequence. I argue that this apparent contradiction in Kelsen's estimate regarding the normative force of recognition is resolved in his dynamic account of the democratic generation of law. Democracy is embedded within a modern political ethos that obligates legal subjects to recognize each other along four dimensions: as contractors whose mutually beneficial cooperation measures esteem by fair standards of contribution; as autonomous agents endowed with equal rights; as …
An Ngo Alternative Report For The Un Committee On The Elimination Of Racial Discrimination, Lonita Benson, Sarah Diaz, Katherine Kaufka Walts, Meghan Scholnick
An Ngo Alternative Report For The Un Committee On The Elimination Of Racial Discrimination, Lonita Benson, Sarah Diaz, Katherine Kaufka Walts, Meghan Scholnick
Center for the Human Rights of Children
No abstract provided.
The Inappropriate Use Of Juvenile Records In Immigration Discretion, Sarah Diaz, Lisa Jacobs
The Inappropriate Use Of Juvenile Records In Immigration Discretion, Sarah Diaz, Lisa Jacobs
Center for the Human Rights of Children
No abstract provided.
An Ngo Input For The Special Rapporteur For The Human Rights Of Migrants To The Office Of The United Nations High Commissioner For Human Rights Report On Human Rights Violations At International Borders: Trends, Prevention, And Accountability, Katherine Kaufka Walts, Sarah J. Diaz, Abigail Mitchell
An Ngo Input For The Special Rapporteur For The Human Rights Of Migrants To The Office Of The United Nations High Commissioner For Human Rights Report On Human Rights Violations At International Borders: Trends, Prevention, And Accountability, Katherine Kaufka Walts, Sarah J. Diaz, Abigail Mitchell
Center for the Human Rights of Children
The Center for the Human Rights of Children, in collaboration with Kids in Need of Defense (KIND) and the Young Center for Immigrant Children’s Rights (“Young Center”) submits this input in response to the call for submissions made by the Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants to inform the forthcoming report to the 50th session of the Human Rights Council regarding the United States’ current border management policies that aim to prevent migration atthe southern border. This input will focus on United States’ push back methods, namely the recently reimplemented Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) otherwise known as “Remain …