An event-condition-action language for XML
Proceedings of the 11th international conference on World Wide Web
Utility Functions in Autonomic Systems
ICAC '04 Proceedings of the First International Conference on Autonomic Computing
Applying Patterns during Business Process Modeling
BPM '08 Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Business Process Management
Linked Data
Ordered completion for first-order logic programs on finite structures
Artificial Intelligence
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Corruption afflicts public services world-wide and is universally considered undesirable. However, there is little prior work to formalize it so that it can be attacked effectively using computational (ICT) techniques. It is believed that trends like process (service) automation and open data help tackle corruption but little is known about why and when. In this work, we address this gap by (a) presenting a meta-model for agent-delivered services motivated by real case studies in corruption, (b) describing common patterns of corruption in such service process designs, (c) formalizing the patterns via a language that instantiates the meta-model, and (d) evaluating the formal patterns on new cases of corruption. We then discuss how the formal patterns help evaluate effectiveness of the various mechanisms for addressing corruption.