Name
Playground
About
FAQ
GitHub
Playground
Shortest Path Finder
Community Detector
Connected Papers
Author Trending
Daniel Preoţiuc-Pietro
Tidjani Négadi
Claudia Calabrese
Thomas Møller-Lassen
Luís Gonçalves
Jhonathan Pinzon
Giovanni Venturelli
Chen Ma
Radu Timofte
Kuanrui Yin
Home
/
Author
/
PHILIP CHUNG
Author Info
Open Visualization
Name
Affiliation
Papers
PHILIP CHUNG
Australasian Legal Information Institute (AustLII) and University of Technology, Sydney and University of New South Wales
16
Collaborators
Citations
PageRank
12
12
6.33
Referers
Referees
References
19
14
11
Publications (16 rows)
Collaborators (12 rows)
Referers (19 rows)
Referees (14 rows)
Title
Citations
PageRank
Year
Utilising AI in the legal assistance sector—Testing a role for legal information institutes
0
0.34
2020
Utilizing AI in the Legal Assistance Sector.
0
0.34
2019
Legal Information Institutes And Ai: Free Access Legal Expertise
0
0.34
2018
A free access, automated law citator with international scope: the LawCite project.
0
0.34
2016
A Free Access, Automated Law Citator with International Scope: The LawCite Project
0
0.34
2016
Supporting and influencing data privacy practice: The free access International Privacy Law Library
0
0.34
2015
Improving stability and performance of an international network of free access legal information systems.
0
0.34
2007
A New Home Online for Commonwealth Law: A Proposal for a CommonLII.
2
0.47
2004
AustLll's aide — natural language legislative rulebases
1
0.37
2001
Solving the Problems of Finding Law on the Web: World Law and DIAL
1
0.41
2000
Scalability of Web Resources for Law: AustLII's Technical Roadmap: Past, Present and Future
1
0.37
2000
With a wysh and a Prayer: An Experiment in Cooperative Development of Legal Knowledgebases.
1
0.40
2000
A Defence of Plain HTML for Law: AustLII's Approach to Standards
0
0.34
2000
Reconciliation on-line: Reflections and Possibilities
0
0.34
2000
With a wysh and a prayer: an experiment in cooperative development of legal knowledgebases
2
0.45
1999
More than wyshful thinking: AustLII's legal inferencing via the World Wide Web
4
0.81
1997
1