I would also add the work done by the Canadian Association of
Law Libraries Vendor Liaison Committee.
Not exact matches
This session will bring together a privacy
law professor who is thinking about a world without intellectual privacy, an academic librarian who worked with an ALA committee to create
Library Privacy Guidelines for E-book Lending and Digital Content
Vendors, and a public librarian working on a grant - funded project to help
library professionals increase their knowledge of digital and data privacy concerns to better serve the patrons who access their
library's technological resources
My feeling is we (
law libraries and legal
vendors) are going to sort this out gradually until the point we see wide adoption in our
law - related organizations.
Every year a «
Vendors Forum» is held as part of the annual meeting of the Canadian
Law Libraries Association (CALL).
A roundtable discussion that was blogged about, a session that included Bess Reynolds (author of The Challenges of E-books in
Law Firm
Libraries), and many chats with
vendors and colleagues.
This year the Canadian Association of
Law Libraries (CALL / ACBD) presented its annual award for legal publishers at its conference in May to Québec - based online
vendor SOQUIJ.
IDENTIFIER: http://web.archive.org/web/20110120204327/http://www.aallnet.org/committee/criv/resources/tools/list/index.htm CREATOR: American Association of
Law Libraries Committee on Relations with Information
Vendors (AALL CRIV).
I have forwarded a link to your posting to both the CALL / ACBD (Canadian Association of
Law Libraries) Vendors Liaison Committee chair and listserv CALL - L to make the law librarians of Canada who aren't already reading Slaw more awa
Law Libraries)
Vendors Liaison Committee chair and listserv CALL - L to make the
law librarians of Canada who aren't already reading Slaw more awa
law librarians of Canada who aren't already reading Slaw more aware.
The
Vendor Liaison Committee (VLC) of the Canadian Association of
Law Libraries (a committee of which I am a member), continues to put together practical information and useful tools.
Many of the products Canadian
law libraries use are not specific to this jurisdiction, and I had fruitful discussions with several
vendors.