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Making Property Law Wiki

Property Law Wiki is an online encyclopedia that provides citizens, students, NGOs, legislators, economists, and researchers with access to property laws, their procedures, and ideas for policy reform. With over 7.3 million articles in 252 languages, it aims to simplify complex legal codes, capture procedural realities and costs, and suggest changes to make property policies better.

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Making Property Law Wiki

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  1. Making Property Law Wiki real

  2. Property Law Wiki is for: • Citizens: access to law feedback about bureaucracy • Students: education • NGO’s: policy study and review • Legislators: reform ideas • Economists: comparative analysis • Researchers: field work, analysis What are the laws? How do they really work (procedures on the ground)? How can we make policy better?

  3. Wiki’s let people share and work on large problems. Property Law Wiki • encyclopedia • “What is X?” • 7.3 million articles • 252 languages What are the laws? How do they really work (procedures on the ground)? How can we make policy better?

  4. Problem scope & solution process • Capture the legal code online • Simplify into plain language • Capture procedural realities and costs • Suggest changes • 150 countries • 1 million pages of state & local code (with significant redundancy) • Procedural bureaucratic “realities” undocumented • 150m pages influencing $9.3 trillion in property= $62,000 per page *Crude estimate needs refining

  5. Problem & Solution Capture Formal law text “what is it?” Explain “what does it simply mean?” • Process • “how does it work, cost • time & $’s bureaucracy?” • Reform • “How can it be made better?” Cultural and political context • +150 countries & territories* • +1 million pages of state & local code/procedure & forms per country (with significant redundancy)*= 50m pages required* • Procedural bureaucratic realities on the ground will also be captured *estimate

  6. Branching model & feedback Property Law wiki aims To record the cost and implications of upstream law and then suggest modifications for improvement Each page or section has a “why” which indicates the legal process driving the subsequent action or requirement. Each pages ask for a “simplified” explanation and a how can this be improved.

  7. Level of engagement & Participants .05m 0.5m 1.0m 5.0m 10m Co-opted form of Gibbons and Hopkins 1980 experiential learning

  8. Technology Benefit Scales $0.10/hour Cheap well understood Free well understood Free scalable Easy to use 5 minutes implementation Feature S3:Hardware lease Amazon Linux cluster distribution Apache servers MySQL databases Wiki (pbwiki?) Google (adsense to start)

  9. *Targeted & tentative

  10. Property Law Wiki outputs: • PR & Goodwill for sponsors and partners • Law in simple language (tutorial level explanations) • Procedural explanations (self updating) • Examples for reform and new legislative and procdural initiatives • Resource for comparitive legal studies • $ and sponsorship relationships • More informed and participative citizenry • Non profit teaching & education charity • Worlds largest “law library” online

  11. Use Cases & designs Use cases, stated simply, allow description of sequences of events that, taken together, lead to a system doing something useful" [1]. Each use case provides one or more scenarios that convey how the system should interact with the users called actors to achieve a specific business goal or function. Use case actors may be end users or other systems. Use cases typically avoid technical jargon, preferring instead the language of the end user or domain expert. Use cases are often co-authored by business analysts and end users.

  12. Participants: Actors Citizens: have multiple agenda’s but most are just seeking information about how to perform various functions or get information about a process. Researcher: May want to make different comparisons and research various aspects of the law and how “actors” engage with the law across sector, economies and geographies. NGO Field worker / investigator: May want to capture impacts in the field, record what is going on in local areas in formal and informal laws. seeking stories from the field and opportunities to capture popular opinion. law makers: may be seeking inputs for reform or better understanding of populist thoughts and current stresses in the system Law Student / lawyer: interested in either research, study of laws or discovering out of sync records.

  13. Actor information needs Key word search Process map graphic Editing rights • How do I???? • What does it mean if? • What does the word ? Mean • Why is the procedure like this? • What does it cost to? • How long does it take to? • How do I share my story? • Who can help me to? • Who can help make this better? • What would improve this process? • What is best practice? In terms of cost and activity. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 Step 5 Step 6 Step 7 Step 8 Step 9 Step 10 Property law wiki

  14. Constraints tools to help • Auto ip country assignment • Auto search keyword • Meta tagging: key words, legals, precedent • Authorship and the rest • Key components in a process “linking” for tracking and comparison • Translations: languages and branching

  15. Long term goals Quantitative goals • Improve property formalization 10%. Convert 10% of extra legal property=$900billion in recognized assets • Improve annual taxable revenues for poorest countries $9billion/year (1% annual tax on property) Qualitative Goals • Improve safety and security for extra legal property holders • Improved procedures for current legal property holders • Improved property transfer market (economic efficiencies) • Improved quality of life via security and more efficient use of capital and capital stock investments in the developing world • Improve national security and stability in various countries via more participatory legal and civilian environment • Improved judicial policy and procedures due to increased transparency and understanding of policy improved • Developing countries taking a greater role in their own development in “soft” infrastructure

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