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Admissibility assistant

Chile - Chamber of Deputies

Use case ID: 054

Author: Chamber of Deputies of Chile

Date: 20 August 2024

Objective:

Determine the admissibility of a bill. This use case describes part of a suite of AI-based products. The CAMINAR platform supports legislative work with the help of AI. It emerged as an innovative response to the challenges faced by the National Congress of Chile during the COVID-19 pandemic and owing to the country’s political situation. The project seeks to leverage the digital strengths of the Chamber of Deputies by utilizing its regulatory repository and parliamentary databases.

Actors:

  • Parliamentarians
  • Officials 

Prerequisites:

  • Database
  • Vectorized regulations documentation
  • Vectorized legal documentation at different legal levels
  • Appropriate prompt
  • System to integrate the tool into its production phase 

Scenario:

  1. Users receive advice or background information to determine the admissibility of a motion or bill. 

Expected results:

  • An admissibility study and its argumentation are received accurately and quickly. 

Potential challenges:

  • Blaming of the tool for the content it generates
  • Delegation of task completeness to the LLM
  • Need for human validation at all times 

Data requirements:

  • Vectorized regulations
  • Updated database for assistant consumption
  • Framework documentation, which may be related to documents or files peripheral to the national legal framework
  • Motions and bills under discussion
  • LLM’s own knowledge 

Integrations with other systems:

  • Parliamentary service system (PORTAL)
  • Management systems for senior corporate management 

Success metrics:

  • Accuracy of the response, when correctness can be determined
  • Speed of the response, related to the requirements of repetitive tasks
  • Legislative coherence

 

The Use cases for AI in parliaments collection is published by the IPU’s Centre for Innovation in Parliament as part of the Parliamentary Data Science Hub’s project to create guidelines for AI governance in parliaments.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence. It may be freely shared and reused with acknowledgement of the author and the IPU. 

A use case describes how a system should work. It is used to plan, develop and measure implementation. A use case is not the same as a case study, which is a descriptive text of an actual project’s implementation. Please note that this use case is provided “as is” and neither the IPU nor the author accepts any responsibility for its use.

For more information about the IPU’s work on artificial intelligence, please visit www.ipu.org/AI or contact [email protected]