The Feb 2007 issue of the Lane County Law Library Newsletter is out. Learn about links to research resources on finding legislative history, administrative law, law journals, and legal…
Search Results for: label/Elder law
County Law Librarian YouTube Promo: Who We Helped Today
What DO public law librarians do? We all do pretty much what public law librarians do in Texas, Maryland, Wisconsin, Georgia, Ohio, Colorado … and California, whose county…
So You Want to be a U.S. Supreme Court Law Librarian?
Did you ever wonder what a U.S. Supreme Court law librarian job description looks like? Here’s your chance – and it’s a part-time job too (well, at least you’ll…
Oregon 2010 Law Library Values (OSB)
The Oregon State Bar (OSB) has posted the 2010 Law Library Values Schedule. The website includes values for previous years as well: “This schedule has been prepared by…
How to Read a Case
From BoleyBlogs, and not just for law students: How to Read a Case, and other first-year tips Excerpt from post: “… Law school holds many wonders, but first the…
Searching Case Law with Google Scholar: New and Improved
“Google Scholar Case Law Evolves“ by Mark Giangrande, Law Librarian blog: Excerpt: “…. Google is hardly a substitute for any of the commercial databases as it does not have the…
Superheroes in Court – Courtrooms in Comics (at Yale Law School)
After highlighting Yale Law School Dogs in a previous blog post, I would be remiss if I omit a blog post on their rare book exhibit on Courtrooms in…
The Exciting World of Library Law: Congressional Puzzles and Laptop Viewing Rights
Library Law has had some interesting posts this past week (and in previous weeks, but I’ll try and focus here:-): Library Law June 13th post: Why is there no…
Oregon (OSB) Constitutional Law Section Spring 2010 Newsletter
The OSB Or Con Law section’s Spring 2010 newsletter is an eye-popping 73 pages – that’s not a newsletter, that’s a book! If you want to immerse yourself in…
Publish or Perish becomes Blog or Perish in the Law Review World
…From Tom’s Weekly (the 9/9 issue that is) – see his archives too): ‘Northwestern University Law Review is using the weblog format to publish law review articles….
Oregon Legal Research Blog

