Looks like the good people at the Harvard Law Review who have been aggressively protecting the copyright of our be-loathed Bluebook against all those who would let
legal citation free into the wild forgot to renew the copyright on the 10th Edition.
Not exact matches
The WisBlawg had a very helpful post last week on two new
free tools that allow lawyers to have
legal citations on Web pages automatically converted to hyperlinks to the actual opinions, statutes, law review articles and so on.
But with the proliferation of
free legal citations and commentary online, some are turning to Google.
Why would Carswell / Thomson / McGill want to make the McGill guide
free when the BCCA has recently mandated that the 7th ed will be the standard for
citation of
legal material?
Mirando suggests that the Canadian
legal community develop a
free uniform
citation guide.
If Iceland can crowd - source a constitution perhaps the Canadian
legal profession can crowd - source new
citation rules, which once finalized, can reside on CanLII for everyone to access for
free.
The data set includes information on, among others, date, member state, court of referral,
legal domain or subject matter (e.g., competition, environmental protection,
free movement of goods), and the official European Court Reports
citation.
Includes
citations and abstracts to
free and subscription scholarly and
legal journals and automatically links to full text when available.
In his introductory remarks Cover notes that «As of September 12, 2012, community discussion was underway about the value of a standardization effort to define a non-proprietary and royalty -
free citation markup language model for
legal / legislative content.»
We, Frédéric Pelletier and I, took a personal interest in
freeing the
legal community from useless punctuation that used to characterize Canadian
legal citations.
Hi Simon: subject to the issue of having absolutely zero time to develop some sort of online Canadian
legal citation guide for
free, I remain game.
Let's abandon our exclusionary practices and, in the spirit of public service, of
free access to law and open access to
legal information, let's reform our anachronistic
citation practices.