Sentences with phrase «government document libraries»

Whatever digitization efforts are underway at our universities are the initiatives primarily of government document libraries, not the law libraries, and the digitization of historical law reports is not on the radar.

Not exact matches

Museum, library and government - sponsored sites often offer teachers quality materials including innovative approaches, primary documents and complete lesson plans.
The exhibition included digitized photographs, manuscripts, broadsheets, paintings, letters, audio, and government documents from US and European libraries.
Unlimited access to the world's largest document library which includes government reports, academic dissertations, detailed scientific studies, and more.
Many government planning documents are declaissified and are available in any library.
Government documents A number of public libraries function as depositories for Canadian government information, meaning that they receive copies of all Government of Canada publications distributed via the Weekly Government documents A number of public libraries function as depositories for Canadian government information, meaning that they receive copies of all Government of Canada publications distributed via the Weekly government information, meaning that they receive copies of all Government of Canada publications distributed via the Weekly Government of Canada publications distributed via the Weekly Checklist.
«The Pace Law Library, library events, legal writing and research, online legal resources, government documents, digital information, environmental law, courts and decisions, current news, legal trends and more.»
I also know of small government libraries which have been scanning other key documents — internal reports, administrative documents and internal policies, statutory consolidations, photos, maps — anything they can get their hands on.
The Free Government Information blog reports on the case of the University of North Texas libraries that boosted usage of their locally digital document and photograph collections by adding relevant links to Wikipedia articles.
In this column, I'll consider legislative materials as a subset of government documents generally, their role in legal research, their place in a contemporary law library collection, controversies surrounding print vs digital formats, and possible policies for collecting them.
Plus, publicly accessible law libraries have the professional obligation, and the subject knowledge, to pick up the slack where official, especially government bodies, fail to make their documents easily accessible to the public, which has a right of access.
on Association of Parliamentary Libraries in Canada Launches Government / Legislative Documents Portal
... Annette Demers Hi Ted Awhile ago, I compiled a list for our law library users which include some more government documents RSS sources that may be of interest: http://www.uwindsor.ca/law/library/rss-feeds-on-law Thanks, I will bookmark your comments...
I have experience of a large government library which provided extensive document delivery, and several university libraries chose to discard substantial holdings based on access to its collection and services.
There are good listservs for law library directors, catalogers, serials librarians, acquisitions librarians, government documents librarians, foreign and international law librarians, and computing services staff.
The Notable Documents project was begun in 1982 and aims to promote awareness of government publications by libraries and their users.
Awhile ago, I compiled a list for our law library users which include some more government documents RSS sources that may be of interest:
A collaboration between the Ontario Legislative Library and the Ontario Council of University Libraries» Scholar's Portal has resulted in the Legislative Library's Ontario government documents collection now being available through OZone.
While the primary focus of the library and its reference department is to serve the research needs of members of the Mitchell Hamline School of Law campus community (students, faculty and staff), we are open to members of the general public who are doing legal research or using the government documents collection.
Taryn Marks — Academic Law Libraries Special Interest Section (ALL - SIS), Continuing Status & Tenure Committee; Government Documents Special Interest Section (GD - SIS), Federal Depository Libraries Program (FDLP) Committee (Chair); LexisNexis Research Grant Jury
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