- From: Bartolini, Claudio <claudio.bartolini@hp.com>
- Date: Tue, 22 Feb 2005 08:59:10 -0800
- To: "Bartolini, Claudio" <claudio.bartolini@hp.com>
- Cc: "Bartolini, Claudio" <claudio.bartolini@hp.com>
Apologies for cross-posting Please distribute as widely as possible Deadline for submission: Feb 28th, 2005. ------------------------------------------------------- Second IEEE International Workshop on Electronic Contracting (WEC '05) July 18, 2005, Munich, Germany http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Claudio_Bartolini/Wec05.html Call for Papers Real world commerce is largely built on a fabric of contracts. Considered abstractly, a contract is an agreed framework of rules used by separately interested parties to coordinate their plans in order to realize cooperative opportunities, while simultaneously limiting their risk from each other's misbehavior. Electronic commerce is encouraging the growth of contract-like mechanisms whose terms are partially machine understandable and enforceable. Building on the success of the First IEEE International Workshop on Electronic Contracting (WEC-04), this second edition is the forum to discuss innovative ideas at the interface between business, legal, and formal notions of contracts. The target audiences will be mainly researchers, scientists, software architects, but also contract lawyers, economists, and industry professionals who need to be acquainted with the state of the art technologies and the future trends in electronic contracting. The event will take place in Munich, Germany on July 18, 2005. IEEE WEC 2005 will be held in conjunction with The International Conference on Electronic Commerce (IEEE CEC 2005). Topics of interest include but are not limited to the following: Contract languages and user interfaces Computer aided contract design, construction, and composition Computer aided approaches to contract negotiation Role of electronic contracts in IT governance Relationship of electronic and legal enforcement mechanisms Electronic vs. legal concepts of non-repudiation Privacy vs. reputation and recourse Contracts and mechanism design Submissions Authors are invited to submit original and significant research contributions in the aforementioned areas. All submissions will be peer-reviewed by the members of the international program committee. We are planning to publish the proceedings in the Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Full papers must not exceed 16 pages and conform to the LNCS style. We accept papers in PDF and PS format. Please send your submission no later than February 28, 2005 to claudio.bartolini@hp.com. Important Dates Paper submission: February 28, 2005 Paper notification: April 7, 2005 Camera-ready papers: April 30, 2005 Workshop Date: July 18, 2005 Workshop Chairs Claudio Bartolini, HP Laboratories, USA, claudio.bartolini@hp.com Mathias Sallé, HP Laboratories, USA, mathias.salle@hp.com Program Committee Samuil Angelov (Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands) Boualem Benatallah (University of New South Wales, Australia) Asit Dan (IBM Research, USA) Aspassia Daskalopulu (University of Thessaly, Greece) Marlon Dumas (Queesland University of Technology, Australia) Andrew Farrell (Imperial College London, UK) Anthony Finkelstein (University College London, UK) Chiara Francalanci (Politecnico di Milano, Italy) Claude Godart (University Henri Poincaré Nancy 1 and INRIA, France) Ian Grigg (Systemics, USA) Alexander Keller (IBM Research, USA) Cuihong Li (Carnegie-Mellon University, USA) Heiko Ludwig (IBM Research, USA) Emil Lupu (Imperial College London, UK) Tom Maibaum (McMaster University, Canada) Dave Marvit (Fujitsu Laboratories, USA) Zoran Milosevic (DSTC, Australia) Enrico Nardelli (NESTOR - Universita' di Roma Tor Vergata, Italy) Andrea Omicini (University of Bologna, Italy) Barbara Pernici (Politecnico di Milano, Italy) Chris Preist (HP Laboratories, UK) Wim Van Grembergen (University of Antwerp, Belgium) Andreas Wombacher (University of Twente, The Netherlands)
Received on Thursday, 24 February 2005 03:22:07 UTC