Sentences with phrase «law librarian»

Allan Chan is a law librarian at Fillmore Riley LLP in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Berman does not answer the question directly, but suggests that evidence to the contrary may be found in this post at the Law Librarian Blog, documenting the growth and popularity of the Law Professor Blogs Network.
I wrote in October about the launch of Law Professor Blogs, a network of blogs written by law professors, and I noted more recently the network's launch of Law Librarian Blog.
Law Blog [Via Law Librarian Blog.]
Then we pulled her back to Berkeley where she is now Associate Law Librarian.
Boston law librarian David Goldman launched kfsource.com, a blog for law librarians, legal researchers and other information professionals.
If you're currently involved in a KM program, or a law librarian seeking new ways to add value to your firm, I would encourage you to read this piece in its entirety.
Except for the leader, and law librarian bits, I rarely think about what the other two «I am» statements have to do with my job.
Joe Hodnicki over at the Law Librarian Blog shared this Clay Shirky presentation last week.
Author: Mari Cheney is the reference librarian at the Utah State Law Library, Jessica Van Buren is a law librarian and Joanne Gialelis is a library assistant at the Utah State Law Library.
What might a law librarian achieve in a career?
If the law librarian moves into a strategic role within a firm, and has oversight for standards on data governance, develops strong working knowledge of information and document workflows with a firm, the person offers faster capacity to pinpoint breadcrumb trail of document workflows for e-discovery situations as well as executing the usual, ie.
The Law Professor Blogs network continues to grow with the addition of Joseph A. Hodnicki's Law Librarian Blog.
The Law Librarian Blog collects links to a photo archives, a tribute of 2,996 bloggers and personal accounts of survivors.
Today, the Law Librarian Blog reports that this useful service is no longer a monthly pdf, but rather a continually updated website with an RSS feed.
Laura Woods (a Law Librarian, as it happens) and I have been attempting to bring this debate to a wider audience, dubbing it The Echo Chamber problem (with the tag #echolib).
I respectfully disagree with the Law Librarian Blog on this issue.
Pairing [Joy London's] award - winning KM blog with editor Sean Hocking's acclaimed Law Librarian News, the semi-monthly «Law Librarian News & excited utterances» will deliver direct - to - desktop news - you - can - use — by, for and about the global legal information and knowledge management market.While excited utterances will continue to deliver the same reliable online coverage of legal KM that its readers have come to rely upon, our new combined publication creates the perfect vehicle for legal knowledge managers and law librarians who want to understand the machinations of the current market.
I know in the past years the publisher / vendor liaison committees from the various law librarian associations across Canada have been working on building positive relationships with legal publishers.
Here are three sites dealing with international human rights that have recently come to my attention (thanks to Lo - Fi Librarian, Law Librarian Blog, and a third source that's slipped off my screen).
Scott Frey, Reference Librarian, at the Western State College of Law, Fullerton, California, has written a nice Delorean free article that takes a look at the future of law libraries from the perspective of law librarian's opinions from the past.
From the perspective of an academic law librarian, and after having heard from and spoken to law librarians from many sectors last month at CALL, I'd say you've pointedly and accurately summed up our concerns about looseleaf titles generally and, specifically, about their supplementation.
If you are attending the upcoming American Association of Law Libraries conference in Denver, you are invited to drop by the CALI booth on Sunday afternoon from 2 to 3 p.m. for a «meet and greet» session with hosts and panelists of the Law Librarian Conversations podcast.
2) Hypothesis # 2: Follow - up and easy access in person and by email / phone to a law librarian will reduce anxiety in the legal research process.
I can't imagine what it was like to be a law librarian before CanLII.
Explains the anonymous law librarian who wrote it:
1) Hypothesis # 1: Legal researchers suffer less anxiety at the initiation stage of their research if they consult a trained law librarian to discuss the issue and identify a research strategy, including recommended sources.
One of the very first people to come by my booth and subscribe was Genie Tyburski, a law librarian at Ballard Spahr Andrews & -LSB-...]
It is also criticlly important to have information circulating among law librarian networks.
I wonder if the third hypothesis couldn't be broadened a little to address the place the law librarian might play near the end of the legal research process.
But then, as the Bodleian Law Librarian at the University of Oxford, Ruth Bird (https://twitter.com/oxfordbirds) tweeted, «Sadly, vendor sessions sound the same whether it's 1999 or 2015.
Where you see the cockeyed spider in the chart, they're missing a link, so let law librarian Nancy McCormack know if you can fill the gap.
This joint white paper acknowledges the strategic alliance that has developed between the law librarian and technologist in driving efficient and effective legal information management.
It seems that every law librarian in the United States knows the photo.
The very next day I learned that John Palfrey had resigned his position as Law Librarian at the Harvard Law School, indeed he had resigned his tenured faculty position, in order to become the Head of Phillips Andover Academy.
Law Librarian Blog editor Joe Hodnicki now wishes his survey had included questions about participants» ages.
Some core contributors: Steve Matthews, who authors Vancouver Law Librarian Blog and VLLB Linkblog and created Florida Lawyers Blog Watch; Connie Crosby is a consultant at Crosby Group Consulting in Toronto and also authors Connie Crosby; Shaunna Mireau is director of knowledge management and libraries at Field Law in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada; Allison C. Shields is the founder and president of Legal Ease Consulting Inc. and also authors Legal Ease Blog and contributes to Lawyerist; Dan Pinnington Dan is director of practicePRO, a claims prevention initiative at the Lawyers» Professional Indemnity Co. of Toronto.
One of the very first people to come by my booth and subscribe was Genie Tyburski, a law librarian at Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll, Philadelphia.
Way back in 2004, I wrote here about the launch of the Law Professor Blogs network by Paul Caron, editor of TaxProf Blog, and Joseph A. Hodnicki, co-editor of Law Librarian Blog.
If any weeding law librarian has a good, complete set of the English Reports to unload, please get in touch!
Being not only a law librarian but a law school librarian, I can't help but ask myself, in a guardedly conditional mood, if the Ryerson proposal for a «different» law school with an innovative, experiential legal education program were allowed to proceed, would that law school need a law library?
Joe Hodnicki Way back in 2004, I wrote here about the launch of the Law Professor Blogs network by Paul Caron, editor of TaxProf Blog, and Joseph A. Hodnicki, co-editor of Law Librarian Blog.
As many of you will know, John is Chief Law Librarian of the Bora Laskin Law Library at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law.
I can think of only one time in the last few years when a non-Canadian trained law librarian was recruited to fill a position.
I believe the no - longer - available letter of intent mentioned a law librarian, but no mention was made of a law library.
[Law Librarian Blog] It would be nice to see them enhance it by pulling in free Lexisone.com primary law content.
-- There is no clear career path for a law librarian who wants to continue in a leadership role but who does not have the dual degrees.
This anecdotal evidence makes me wonder about a few things: — Why has word about parttime law programs not made its way to the law librarian community?
For a Canadian law librarian who would like to pursue legal studies, it means stopping work for 3 years, not only paying for law school but also potentially giving up an income for those years.
The new Law Librarian of Congress, Jane Sanchez, started her new position the second week in February.
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