The Douglas County Law Library can now be added to the list of Oregon county law libraries with conference rooms for lawyers . “The Douglas…
Search Results for: label/Food law
Oregon Nonprofits and the Law
Law librarians get all sorts of questions about nonprofit organizations. We get questions from nonprofit board members, donors, lawyers hired by nonprofits, and from people who want to set up nonprofits….
Internet Dating: Law Librarians Walk Into the Abyss and Beyond
Law librarians are useful people to have around. We know how to find statutes, cases, obscure reports, know about mysteries of the invisible web, guide you through the pain…
Nine Things Pro Se (Self-represented) Litigants Need to Know
…all online. You can’t “Google” the law and expect to win your case. Legal analysis is even harder. See, for example: Five Methods of Legal Reasoning…
Researching “Criminal Justice” versus Researching “The Law”
Researching criminal justice topics can be quite different from researching the law. There is overlap, of course, but sometimes not very much at all depending on the specific question….
New 2008 Disabled Parking Law: Wheelchair Users Only
The Willamette Week (12/12/07 issue) article by Nigel Jaquiss, “Space Odyssey: New law limits disabled parking benefits for drivers not in wheelchairs,” describes the new law, SB 716, that…
What to keep in your employee files: A small law firm’s guide
Jim Calloway blogs about and links to his guide: “What to keep in your employee files: A small law firm’s guide” Link to Jim’s homepage for more law practice…
Blueboinking
Something about Bluebooking makes people crazy. I agree, though only up to a point. Law librarians’ lives are made a little easier, though not necessarily more fun, than they…
Cast Your Bread …: Law Student Textbook Costs and Student Debt
This Oregonian opinion article by a recent law school graduate isn’t just Oregon-centric and encapsulates what some of us have always known: we don’t live in a bubble, you…
New Book: Interpreting Oregon Law, 2009 edition
The Oregon State Bar has released their Interpreting Oregon Law, 2009 edition, a welcome addition to any Oregon lawyer or law library collection. You can find an order form…
Oregon Legal Research Blog

