Alizé announces a partnership with the Pasicrisie
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Alizé announces the signing of a partnership with the Pasicrisie, a leading association in the dissemination of Luxembourg case law. The purpose of this collaboration is to make the Pasicrisie’s documentary corpus accessible within Alizé.
For more than a century, the Pasicrisie has carried out a work of selection, analysis and publication of Luxembourg case law, complemented by a selection of legal doctrine. An essential reference for lawyers, judges, legal professionals, academics and students, it helps make Luxembourg law more accessible and intelligible through editorial work recognised for its rigour and quality.
This partnership is of particular significance in the current context of legal artificial intelligence. While publicly accessible court decisions essentially date back to the 1980s, the Pasicrisie’s documentary collection covers more than a century of legal practice and provides access to decisions dating back to the late nineteenth century. This historical depth represents a unique documentary asset for understanding the evolution of Luxembourg law and enriching legal analysis tools.
Alizé was created on the observation that legal research remains an essential but particularly time-consuming activity. Artificial intelligence now makes it possible to automate part of this work, provided that it is grounded in reliable and relevant sources. In the legal field, the quality of the results depends directly on the quality of the data used. It is also a way to reduce the risk of errors or hallucinations by basing analyses on an identified, structured and verifiable documentary corpus.
As part of this partnership, Pasicrisie subscribers will be able to use this corpus through the tools developed by Alizé. They will benefit in particular from natural language search features, document analysis assistance, and AI-enhanced consultation. Professionals who do not yet have a subscription to the Pasicrisie will also be able to subscribe directly through Alizé in order to access all the resources and features associated with this collaboration.
By combining a reference legal heritage with technologies developed in Luxembourg for the needs of Luxembourg law, Alizé and the Pasicrisie are taking a new step in modernising access to legal information and in promoting the sources of national law.

