Four dark corners of requirements engineering
ACM Transactions on Software Engineering and Methodology (TOSEM)
Foundations of Databases: The Logical Level
Foundations of Databases: The Logical Level
Analyzing Regulatory Rules for Privacy and Security Requirements
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
RE '08 Proceedings of the 2008 16th IEEE International Requirements Engineering Conference
Automating the Extraction of Rights and Obligations for Regulatory Compliance
ER '08 Proceedings of the 27th International Conference on Conceptual Modeling
Towards a framework for tracking legal compliance in healthcare
CAiSE'07 Proceedings of the 19th international conference on Advanced information systems engineering
A machine learning approach for tracing regulatory codes to product specific requirements
Proceedings of the 32nd ACM/IEEE International Conference on Software Engineering - Volume 1
RE '10 Proceedings of the 2010 18th IEEE International Requirements Engineering Conference
Representing and reasoning about preferences in requirements engineering
Requirements Engineering - Special Issue on Best Papers of RE'10: Requirements Engineering in a Multi-faceted World
The disjunctive datalog system DLV
Datalog'10 Proceedings of the First international conference on Datalog Reloaded
Impediments to requirements-compliance
REFSQ'12 Proceedings of the 18th international conference on Requirements Engineering: foundation for software quality
Reconciling multi-jurisdictional legal requirements: A case study in requirements water marking
RE '12 Proceedings of the 2012 IEEE 20th International Requirements Engineering Conference (RE)
Towards outcome-based regulatory compliance in aviation security
RE '12 Proceedings of the 2012 IEEE 20th International Requirements Engineering Conference (RE)
Requirements, intentions, goals and applicable norms
ER'12 Proceedings of the 2012 international conference on Advances in Conceptual Modeling
Capturing variability of law with nómos 2
ER'12 Proceedings of the 31st international conference on Conceptual Modeling
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[Context and motivation] Compliance to relevant laws is increasingly recognized as a critical, but also expensive, quality for software requirements. [Question/Problem] Laws contain elements such as conditions and derogations that generate a space of possible compliance alternatives. During requirements engineering, an analyst has to select one of these compliance alternatives and ensure that the requirements specification she is putting together complies with that alternative. However, the space of such alternatives is often large. [Principal ideas and results] This paper extends Nòmos 2, a modeling framework for laws, to support modeling of and reasoning with stakeholder preferences and priorities. The problem of preferred regulatory compliance is then defined as a problem of finding a compliance alternative that matches best stakeholder preferences. [Contribution] The paper defines the concept of preference between situations and integrates it with the Nòmos 2 modeling language. It also presents a reasoning tool for preferences and illustrates its use with an extract from a use case concerning the Italian law on Electronic Health Record.