Lex (URN)

lex is a URN namespace, a type of Uniform Resource Name (URN), that allows accurate identification of laws and other legal norms.

LexML Brasil[1] and Italy[2] (Civil law countries) already do an official use of the URN LEX standard draft v0.9,[3] as a namespace for sources of law.

Syntax

The identifier has a hierarchical structure as follows:[3]

"urn:lex:"<NSS>

where NSS is the Namespace Specific String composed as follows:

<NSS>::=<jurisdiction>":"<local-name>

where:

<jurisdiction> is the part providing the identification of the jurisdiction, generally corresponding to the country where the source of law is issued.
<local-name> is the uniform name of the source of law in the country or jurisdiction where it is issued; its internal structure is common to the already adopted schemas.

Examples of sources of law identifyed by lex URNs:

urn:lex:it:stato:legge:2003-09-21;456 (Italian act) 
urn:lex:fr:etat:lois:2004-12-06;321 (French act)
urn:lex:es:estado:ley:2002-07-12;123 (Spanish act)
urn:lex:ch;glarus:regiere:erlass:2007-10-15;963 (Glarus Swiss Canton decree)
urn:lex:eu:council:directive:2010-03-09;2010-19-UE (EU Council Directive)
urn:lex:us:federal.supreme.court:decision:1963-03-18;372.us.335 (US FSC decision)

Concrete examples

Transparent identifiers

URNs are used as unique identifiers (unique IDs), like in, for example, to identify a book by its ISBN so, the URN is also nominated as "public (unique) ID". In that kind of public utilization, the need for a central authority (the International ISBN Agency in the example) as unique and necessary URN-resolver, is a problem. In that context, the identifier's user must to query the authority about the correct ID, from some object's metadata, like year or title. IDs like ISBN, that need a central authority are also named "opaque IDs".

A common use of Lex URNs, by other hand, is to express transparent identifiers, that can be built up by simple rules or inferences from basic metadata. Example: the Brazilian Lex URN is used for both, legislative and case law unique and universal identifier, using rules of formatting and abbreviation of the authority's name, the publication date, and the local identifier (present in the title of the document).

URN schemes where each URN is also a transparent identifier, can be used in distributed (non-central) URN-resolution systems; and the URNs can be created in absence of these systems, even before to the recording in these systems.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.