I am convinced that, as more libraries cancel more subscriptions and access to online services levels the playing field among
law school library collections, it is the possession of a large retrospective collection and a commitment to developing and maintaining a large monographs collection that will define the great research libraries.
Not exact matches
«
Libraries were founded as an engine for the democratization of knowledge, and the digitization of Harvard
Law School's collection of U.S. case law is a tremendous step forward in making legal information open and easily accessible to the public,» said Jonathan Zittrain, the George Bemis professor of international law at Harvard Law School and vice dean for library and information resources, in a press release issued this morni
Law School's
collection of U.S. case
law is a tremendous step forward in making legal information open and easily accessible to the public,» said Jonathan Zittrain, the George Bemis professor of international law at Harvard Law School and vice dean for library and information resources, in a press release issued this morni
law is a tremendous step forward in making legal information open and easily accessible to the public,» said Jonathan Zittrain, the George Bemis professor of international
law at Harvard Law School and vice dean for library and information resources, in a press release issued this morni
law at Harvard
Law School and vice dean for library and information resources, in a press release issued this morni
Law School and vice dean for
library and information resources, in a press release issued this morning.
This only stands to reason: our courthouse
libraries are the oldest
law libraries in the country; they were developing extensive
collections of Canadian and English
law long before any of today's
law firms and
law schools had been founded.
Harvard's vice dean for
library and information resources, Jonathan Zittrain, summed up the significance better than I could when he said: «
Libraries were founded as an engine for the democratization of knowledge, and the digitization of Harvard
Law School's collection of U.S. case law is a tremendous step forward in making legal information open and easily accessible to the public.&raq
Law School's
collection of U.S. case
law is a tremendous step forward in making legal information open and easily accessible to the public.&raq
law is a tremendous step forward in making legal information open and easily accessible to the public.»
Faculty (and possibly students) will need access to a research - quality
library collection, but that doesn't need to be in the
law school.
«
Libraries were founded as an engine for the democratization of knowledge, and the digitization of Harvard
Law School's collection of US case law is a tremendous step forward in making legal information open and easily accessible to the publ
Law School's
collection of US case
law is a tremendous step forward in making legal information open and easily accessible to the publ
law is a tremendous step forward in making legal information open and easily accessible to the public.
Your remarks about
law firm
library collection decisions compared with those in a
law school library decisions, I believe, apt.
In the summer of 1968, a group of Canadian
law librarians, under the leadership of Shih - Sheng Hu, Law Librarian of the University of Manitoba, met at the temporary warehouse quarters of the of the Osgoode Hall Law School Library to address Canadian law libraries» need for a viable classification scheme for their own burgeoning law collectio
law librarians, under the leadership of Shih - Sheng Hu,
Law Librarian of the University of Manitoba, met at the temporary warehouse quarters of the of the Osgoode Hall Law School Library to address Canadian law libraries» need for a viable classification scheme for their own burgeoning law collectio
Law Librarian of the University of Manitoba, met at the temporary warehouse quarters of the of the Osgoode Hall
Law School Library to address Canadian law libraries» need for a viable classification scheme for their own burgeoning law collectio
Law School Library to address Canadian
law libraries» need for a viable classification scheme for their own burgeoning law collectio
law libraries» need for a viable classification scheme for their own burgeoning
law collectio
law collections.
All of our
law school libraries have extensive
collections of primary legal materials and
law journals.
Consequently, as a
law school library, we have an obligation not only to the School but to law firm libraries and the profession to maintain our extensive print collections of primary legal materials and law jou
school library, we have an obligation not only to the
School but to law firm libraries and the profession to maintain our extensive print collections of primary legal materials and law jou
School but to
law firm
libraries and the profession to maintain our extensive print
collections of primary legal materials and
law journals.
In this second part, I'll look at how journals are used in legal research today in both practice and in
law schools, their place in a contemporary
law library collection, and possible policies for collecting them.
In this column, I'd like to consider journals, how they're used in legal research today both in practice and in
law schools, and their place in a contemporary
law library collection.
The efficiencies that result from shared resources —
collection and human — likely forestall any sense of impending doom for the
law school library.
Most
law books I read, reviewed, or selected for our
law library collections after
law school were also mainly textual — words, words, words, on top of words, black text against a white background.
I did a small
collection of illustrated title pages for the rare book
collection at the University of Denver Westminster
Law Library when I was in
library school.
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.