Presented by Washington State Administrative Office of the Courts Service-Oriented Architecture: Why should we care? Tom Clarke January 2005
c The Global SOA Vision “Any member of the justice community can access the information they need to do their job at the time they need it, in a form that is useful, regardless of the location of the data.”
c Justice Constraints Many independent agencies and funding sources Information sharing across divergent disciplines, branches of government, and business models Business processes scaling across wide range Many differences in software & hardware
c SOA Benefits Autonomous business processes High levels of reuse Choice of implementation vendors and consultants Off-the-shelf commodity software components
c The Global SOA Agenda Identify justice services Recommend a strategy for deployment Recommend a strategy for developing supporting standards Recommend a strategy for hosting supporting registries (both services & standards) Recommend best practices for security, reliability, privacy, access, etc.
c Justice Services GJXDM component = Microservice Content Microservice + microservice + microservice = Reference Document JIEM reference data exchange + Reference document = Service Content
c Justice Services, cont. Service Content + Message Profile = Service Services + Registries + standards + agreements + best practices = Managed Services
c Who is doing what? GJXDM content Global XSTF, Justice Associations, IJIS Message standards IJIS GTTAC OASIS Integrated Justice TC SEARCH Global ISWG Services SC
c Who is doing what?, cont. Technology World Wide Web Consortium Web Services-Interoperability OASIS Implementation Global ISWG Registries SC, Standards SC Global Security WG, Privacy WG
c Business Benefits Lower costs Streamline processes Improve service Provide mission-critical services Support a diverse community
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