Python for Law
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  • MLang: Compiling Tax Regulations as Python

    Sep 27, 2020 About 9 mins

    How can formalizing regulations as computer code help us check whether the regulations satisfy reasonable policy objectives? Computer science researcher (and Catala creator) Denis Merigoux has tried to answer that question with a project called MLang. As Merigoux explained more fully on his blog, this project became possible because the French g... Read More

  • Serving US Legislative Markup Docs as JSON Using Django

    Sep 15, 2020 About 10 mins

    The purpose of the API I created at authorityspoke.com is to take provisions of the US Code and Constitution that have been published in XML by the US government, extract their headings and content, and then serve those as JSON in response to web requests. So a question that a prospective user might ask is, why download laws as JSON when they’re... Read More

  • Welcome

    Sep 14, 2020 About 2 mins

    I’ve started this new blog to advance the idea that there should be a set of tools, interoperable with general Python data science libraries, for working with legal data and sharing legal analysis with Python. Learning Python gives you access to a better array of open source data tools than any other language, which makes it the language of choi... Read More

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  • APIs 4
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  • BetterRules 1
  • Courts-DB 1
  • Django 1
  • Docassemble 1
  • Eyecite 1
  • Hypothesis 1
  • ICAIL 1
  • Justopinion 1
  • L4 1
  • Legislice 2
  • MLang 1
  • Nettlesome 2
  • OpenFisca 1
  • Pint 1
  • Reporters-DB 1
  • Sympy 1
  • USLM 1
  • Z3 2
  • caselaw 5
  • collation 1
  • explainability 2
  • legislation 5
  • reasoning 2
  • semantics 1
  • taxation 2
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