Last time I talked about KLISS I said I would talk about some of the reasons why a legislature/parliament is not a happy hunting ground for the blind application of standard IT architecture patterns from the document management/content management/publishing space.
The first, often quite glaring architectural non-sequitur goes like this:
1) legislatures/parliaments are full of very structured documents : bills, resolutions, journals, calendars, statutes, annotations...all have readily apparent structure.
2) XML is all about handling very structured documents.
3) Therefore, classic XML approaches fit legislatures/parliaments.
There are a variety of reasons why this analysis is, in my opinion, wrong but it will take me a number of posts to explain why.
Before I start, let me point out that XML *has* an enormous role to play in legislatures/parliaments but it cannot be simply applied blindly per the standard XML value model without causing significant problems. The 7 main reasons are:
a) the centrality of line/page number citation in amendment cycles
b) the complex nature of amendatory actions
c) the critical nature of fidelity with historically produced renderings
d) the fluid nature of work-in-progress legal assets
e) the complexity of amendment cycle business rules that often pre-date computers and cannot be changed to make life easier for modern software
f) the subtle inter-play between legal content and legal content renderings
g) content aggregation and derived document types
Next up : "the centrality of line/page number citation in amendment cycles"
1 comment:
It's good to find someone raising this issue. FWIW, I think you're right (if I have correctly anticipated your arguments). Looking forward to the posts.
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