In computational models of argumentation, argument justification has attracted more attention than statement justification, and significant sensitivity losses are identifiable when dealing with the justification of statements by otherwise appealing formalisms. This paper reappraises statement justification as a formalism-independent component in argument-based reasoning. We introduce a novel general model of argument-based reasoning based on multiple stages of labellings, the last one being devoted to statement justification, identify two alternative paths from argument acceptance to statement justification, and compare their expressiveness. We then show that this model encompasses several prominent literature proposals as special cases, thereby enabling a systematic comparison of existing approaches to statement justification, evidencing their merits and limits. Finally we illustrate our model by specifying a generic ignorance-aware statement justification and showing how it can be seamlessly integrated into different formalisms.
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