Title: Strat Plan Model
1(No Transcript)
2Standards vs. regulations
Standard A document approved by a recognized
body, that provides for common and repeated use,
rules, guidelines, or characteristics for
products, processes or services for which
compliance is not mandatory. Regulation A
document that describes product, process or
service characteristics, including the applicable
administrative provisions, with which compliance
is mandatory. International Standards
Organization (ISO)
3Standards adopt rather than develop
- Because standards for electronic justice
information sharing have been developed at the
national level, there is no need for states or
localities to develop such standards from
scratch. - Standards are available to facilitate electronic
information sharing between disparate justice
systems at all levelsfederal, state and local - Therefore, it is only necessary to actually
develop standards for those very limited, unique
exchanges that apply solely to a particular
jurisdiction, locality or state.
4Can you get away without using standards? (well
yes, but!)
- Most electronic data exchanges that have been
developed without standards are needlessly
cumbersome - Non-standards-based exchanges usually require
expensive and time-consuming development of
custom data exchange interfaces - Custom interfaces, once developed, cannot easily
be reused when creating an additional interfaces
5Net effect of ignoring standards
- Repeated custom interface development results in
a tangled ad hoc data exchange architecture that
is undependable and difficult to maintain - High development costs associated with custom
interfaces limits the overall value of data
exchanges between justice agencies - Reliance on custom interfaces limits electronic
data exchange to the few agencies that can afford
the required custom programming
6Bottom Line Without universally applicable
standards, information sharing must be negotiated
on an agency-by-agency basis and each
information-sharing interface must be
independently programmed. This is obviously
inefficient and costly.
7The solution the Global Justice XML Data Model
(JXDM)
- When properly implemented, the JXDM will allow
information to be seamlessly transferred and
simultaneously translated as it is passed from
one justice agency to another. - Many groups have contributed to the development
of the JXDM. What has emerged is single, uniform
justice XML definition that can be used by
justice agencies throughout the world
8Whos behind Justice XML?
- SEARCH
- U.S. Dept. of Justice
- GLOBAL
- National Center for State Courts
- IJIS Institute
- Most justice application vendors
- Industry Working Group (IWG)
- Justice Information Systems Professionals (JISP)
- National Association of State Chief Information
Officers (NASCIO)
9So, what is XML?
- XML is widely accepted as the technology that can
facilitate the seamless exchange and simultaneous
translation of data between disparate systems. - While XML is not the only technology that
facilitates data exchange between systems, it is
by far the most accepted and it is gaining more
acceptance every day - All major vendors of database softwareIBM,
Oracle and Microsoft, etc.have invested
significantly in making their software offerings
fully XML compliant.
10What about regulations?
- We need regulations that will mandate minimum
levels of justice enterprise network security. - We need regulations to ensure consistent
telecommunications protocol(s) for transferring
data between agencies - We need data security regulations
- We need regulations that will ensure minimum
levels of user training before users gain access
to state and national criminal history systems.
11Justice XML is not a panacea solution (truth in
advertising)
- While justice XML provides the technology to move
data seamlessly from system to system,
translation issues still remain, for example - ALIAS in a law enforcement system may mean
something different than ALIAS in a court
system - Different systems record information at different
levels of specificity. - Different systems might share the same data items
but have different allowable values