SECYMar 10

Towards Viewpoint-centric Artifact-based Regulatory Requirements Engineering for Compliance by Design

arXiv:2603.09492v11.7h-index: 5
Predicted impact top 100% in SE · last 90 daysOriginality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of regulatory compliance in software engineering for industry practitioners, but it is incremental as it builds on existing approaches without demonstrating broad impact.

The paper tackles the challenge of integrating regulatory requirements engineering into software development for compliance by design, reporting on the synthesis of an Artefact Model (AM4RRE) to address coordination issues between viewpoints, though no concrete results or numbers are provided.

Processing regulations and resulting requirements to achieve regulatory compliance in software engineering (SE) is a developing challenge due to the continuously growing amount, complexity, and expanding scope of regulations. Despite the growing amount of newly suggested regulatory requirements engineering (RE) approaches by the research community, industry remains under pressure to assure their integration into their RE and overall software development life cycle (SDLC) practices to facilitate a seamless and legally valid compliance by design. As of today, we still have limited empirical understanding of how this can be achieved. Such integration should avoid additional burdens and address the demands of legal knowledge intensity, cross-functional communication and consistency between different involved viewpoints. Intermediary results of this doctoral study showed that regulatory RE has peculiarities distinguishing it from the engineering of other requirements. Oftentimes, organizations establish standalone regulatory RE processes on the organizational level. However, software development teams usually approach compliance by design in an ad-hoc manner, rather than in a systematic way. Among other, because of the complexity of the coordination between the involved viewpoints. The goal of this paper is to report and get feedback about the synthesis and future evaluation of our Artefact Model for Regulatory Requirements Engineering (AM4RRE) for a integrated compliance by design. We hope this paper will spark discussions about regulatory RE and help us refine plans for the final stage of the doctoral study.

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