On Developing an Artifact-based Approach to Regulatory Requirements Engineering
Context: Regulatory acts are a challenging source when eliciting, interpreting, and analyzing requirements. Requirements engineers often need to involve legal experts who, however, may often not be available. This raises the need for approaches to regulatory Requirements Engineering (RE) covering an...
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Zusammenfassung: | Context: Regulatory acts are a challenging source when eliciting,
interpreting, and analyzing requirements. Requirements engineers often need to
involve legal experts who, however, may often not be available. This raises the
need for approaches to regulatory Requirements Engineering (RE) covering and
integrating both legal and engineering perspectives.
Problem: Regulatory RE approaches need to capture and reflect both the
elementary concepts and relationships from a legal perspective and their
seamless transition to concepts used to specify software requirements. No
existing approach considers explicating and managing legal domain knowledge and
engineering-legal coordination.
Method: We conducted focus group sessions with legal researchers to identify
the core challenges to establishing a regulatory RE approach. Based on our
findings, we developed a candidate solution and conducted a first conceptual
validation to assess its feasibility.
Results: We introduce the first version of our Artifact Model for Regulatory
Requirements Engineering (AM4RRE) and its conceptual foundation. It provides a
blueprint for applying legal (modelling) concepts and well-established RE
concepts. Our initial results suggest that artifact-centric RE can be applied
to managing legal domain knowledge and engineering-legal coordination.
Conclusions: The focus groups that served as a basis for building our model
and the results from the expert validation both strengthen our confidence that
we already provide a valuable basis for systematically integrating legal
concepts into RE. This overcomes contemporary challenges to regulatory RE and
serves as a basis for exposure to critical discussions in the community before
continuing with the development of tool-supported extensions and large-scale
empirical evaluations in practice. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2405.00415 |