Trevor Bench-Capon

Trevor Bench-Capon (born 1953) is a British computer scientist and an Honorary Visiting Professor of computer science at the University of Liverpool, where he taught from 1987 until his retirement in 2012. He is the author of work on computer science and ontology and is one of the editors in chief of the Artificial Intelligence and Law Journal.

Life

After reading Philosophy and Economics at St John's College, Oxford, Bench-Capon took the research degree of D. Phil at Oxford. He then worked in the policy and computer branches of the British Government's Department of Health and Social Security, after which he researched logic programming as applied to legislation at Imperial College London. Since 1987 he has been an academic in the Computer Science department of the University of Liverpool, first as lecturer, then from 1992 senior lecturer, from 1999 Reader, and from 2004 as Professor of Computer Science.[1] With Kevin D. Ashley and Giovanni Sartor he is an editor in chief of the Artificial Intelligence and Law Journal.[2]

Bench-Capon's interests are all aspects of advanced informatics systems, with a specialism in the application of such systems to law.[1] He has been called "one of the world's recognised experts on AI and the law".[3]

In 1975 Bench-Capon was a member of the St John's College University Challenge team, and in 1978 he married Priscilla Bradley, who had represented St Anne's in the competition earlier that year. Their sons James and Michael appeared in the University Challenge teams of Clare College, Cambridge, and Oriel College, Oxford, in 2002 and 2003 respectively.[4]

Bench-Capon was tutorial partner of Tony Blair in economics at Oxford and logic instructor of Benazir Bhutto.

Major publications

Notes

  1. 1 2 Trevor Bench-Capon bio at liv.ac.uk, accessed 23 April 2012
  2. Artificial Intelligence and Law at springer.com, accessed 23 April 2012
  3. Computers and law vols 3-4 (Society for Computers and Law, 1992), p. 22
  4. Bench-Capons on University Challenge at liv.ac.uk, accessed 23 April 2012

External links

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