Book contents
- Legal Informatics
- Legal Informatics
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Part I Introduction to Legal Informatics
- Part II Legal Informatics
- A Information Representation, Preprocessing, and Document Assembly
- B. Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, Natural Language Processing, and Blockchain
- C. Process Improvement, Gamification, and Design Thinking
- 2.10 Legal Informatics-Based Technology in Broader Workflows
- 2.11 Gamification of Work and Feedback Systems
- 2.12 Introduction to Design Thinking for Law
- D. Evaluation
- Part III Use Cases in Legal Informatics
- Part IV Legal Informatics in the Industrial Context
2.12 - Introduction to Design Thinking for Law
from C. - Process Improvement, Gamification, and Design Thinking
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 February 2021
- Legal Informatics
- Legal Informatics
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Part I Introduction to Legal Informatics
- Part II Legal Informatics
- A Information Representation, Preprocessing, and Document Assembly
- B. Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, Natural Language Processing, and Blockchain
- C. Process Improvement, Gamification, and Design Thinking
- 2.10 Legal Informatics-Based Technology in Broader Workflows
- 2.11 Gamification of Work and Feedback Systems
- 2.12 Introduction to Design Thinking for Law
- D. Evaluation
- Part III Use Cases in Legal Informatics
- Part IV Legal Informatics in the Industrial Context
Summary
The past decade has seen an increase in conversations about innovation in law, with a focus on how new technology can make the legal system more efficient and effective. Legal technology, in the form of artificial intelligence (AI), data analytics, and mobile applications, has been heralded as bringing a new era of legal services. This chapter advocates for a distinct but complementary approach to legal innovation, based in human-centered design, which can create new non-technological innovations and improve how lawyers and laypeople engage with legal technology. If a technology-driven approach focuses on how to make systems more intelligent and more efficient, a design-driven approach focuses on how to make systems that people want to use, are able to use, and that give them value.
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- Information
- Legal Informatics , pp. 155 - 176Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021
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