Abstract
Globalization and international trade have transformed the delivery of transnational legal services worldwide. Law firms face market competition through a variety of strategies, ranging from expansion in size, specialization of services, international alliances or creation of networks. Transnational legal networks (TLN) have emerged as one of those alternatives, but they face a number of organizational challenges: cross-referral of cases, knowledge management strategies, exchange of information, etc. The Netcase project aims at addressing those major challenges by proposing an intelligent system of automatic case forwarding within TLN. Netcase is able to analyze incoming cases and assign them to the most appropriate law firms and lawyers. The selection is based on law firm specialties, availability of resources, and lawyers’ skills. The model results in a central market where lawyers and law firms are skill producers, law firms are also skill containers, and legal cases are goods that need skills to be solved.
Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Preview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
International Financial Services: Legal Services (2003), available at http://www.ifsl.org.uk
Euromonitor International: Major Market Profiles (2004), available at http://www.euromonitor.com
McBarnet, D.: Transnational Transactions: Legal Work, Cross-border Commerce and Global Regulation. In: Likosky, M. (ed.) Transnational Legal Processes, pp. 98–113. Butterworths Lexis-Nexis, London (2002)
Galanter, M., Palay, T.: Why the Big Get Bigger: The Promotion-to-Partner Tournament and the Growth of Large Law Firms. Virginia Law Review 76, 747–811 (1990)
Galanter, M., Palay, T.: The Many Futures of the Big Law Firm. South Carolina Law Review 45, 905–928 (1994)
Thomas, R.S., Schwab, S.J., Hansen, R.H.: Megafirms. North Carolina Law Review 80, 115–198 (2001)
Galanter, M., Palay, T.: A Little Jousting about the Big Law Firm Tournament. Virginia Law Review 84, 1683–1693 (1998)
Garth, B., Silver, C.: The MDP Challenge in the Context of Globalization. Case Western Reserve Law Review 52, 903–942 (2002)
Adams, E.S., Albert, S.: Law Redesigns Law: Legal Principles as Principles of Law Firm Organization. Rutgers Law Review 51, 1133–1206 (1999)
Silver, C.: Globalization and the U.S. Market in Legal Services: Shifting Identities. Law & Policy International Business 31, 1093–1150 (2000)
American Lawyer Media: The 2003 Global 100 (2003)
Legal500.com: The Legal 500 Series (2003), available at http://www.legal500.com/index.php
Daly, M.: Monopolist, Aristocrat, Or Entrepreneur?: A Comparative Perspective on the Future of Multidisciplinary Partnerships in the United States, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom after the Disintegration of Andersen Legal, Washington University Law Quarterly 80, 589–648 (2002)
Expansión: Ránking Anual de Despachos de Abogados, 47 (2004)
Dezalay, I., Garth, B.: Dealing in Virtue: International Commercial Arbitration and the Construction of a Transnational Legal Order. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1996)
Pfeifer, M., Drolshammer, J.: Introduction: On the Way to a Globalized Practice of Law? European Journal of Law Reform 2, 391–403 (2000)
Rabinovich-Einy, O.: The Ford-Firestones of the Future: Resolving Offline Disputes in an Online Society. In: Lodder, A.R., et al. (eds.) Essays on Legal and Technical Aspects of Online Dispute Resolution, Papers from the ICAIL 2003 ODR Workshop, June 28, 2003, pp. 37–50. CEDIRE, Edinburgh (2003)
Klein, L.: Applying Artificial Intelligence to Litigation. American Lawyer, 12 (1988)
Gottschalk, P.: Knowledge Management in the Professions: The Case of IT Support in Law Firms. In: Proceedings of the 33rd Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, pp. 1–10. IEEE, Los Alamitos (2000)
Holmes, J.: The Technological Revolution for Legal Services Organizations May Change your Practice. Texas Bar Journal 65, 496–498 (2002)
Silver, C.: Regulatory Mismatch in the International Market for Legal Services. Northwestern Journal of International Law and Business 23, 487–550 (2003)
Maney, M., et al.: How Lawyers and Firms Are Positioning Themselves to Serve International Clients in Today’s Environment. In: Delivery of International Legal Services in the Coming Decade, Annual Meeting of the International Law and Practice Section of the NYSBA, International Law Practicum, vol. 15, pp. 67–100 (2002)
Zulack, J.F.: How Lawyers and Firms Are PositioningThemselves to Serve International Clients in Today’s Environment. In: Delivery of International Legal Services in the Coming Decade, Annual Meeting of the International Law and Practice Section of the NYSBA, International Law Practicum, vol. 15, pp. 67–100 (2002)
Anduri, C.: The Association Model. In: Maney, M., et al. (eds.) How Lawyers and Firms Are Positioning Themselves to Serve International Clients in Today’s Environment, Delivery of International Legal Services in the Coming Decade, Annual Meeting of the International Law and Practice Section of the NYSBA, International Law Practicum, Delivery of International Legal Services in the Coming Decade, Annual Meeting of the International Law and Practice Section of the NYSBA, International Law Practicum, vol. 15, pp. 67–100 (2002)
Martindale-Hubbell: International Law Directory, Lexis-Nexis (2003)
GRES-UAB unpublished research on transnational legal networks (2001)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2005 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Contreras, J., Poblet, M. (2005). NetCase: An Intelligent System to Assist Legal Services Providers in Transnational Legal Networks. In: Benjamins, V.R., Casanovas, P., Breuker, J., Gangemi, A. (eds) Law and the Semantic Web. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 3369. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-32253-5_14
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-32253-5_14
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-540-25063-0
Online ISBN: 978-3-540-32253-5
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)