Please read the Nov. 11, 2011, update to this post. And a couple other variations library reference staff hear a lot: Is it Lawful to Record Someone Without…
Search Results for: label/Indian (tribal) Law
Free “Law School” (via CALI) – or a Cure for Insomnia?
Do you have what it takes not only to enjoy law school classes, but not to fall asleep when you hear someone talk about indebitatus assumptsit, a conditional devise,…
More Uses for Old Law Books
Another use for old law books and a fun one at that: Federal Supplement w/ Glass Flask Our current guide on How to Dispose of…
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….
Online Book Privacy Law – in California
See the Law Librarian Blog , October 4, 2011, blog post: California Enacts Book Purchase Privacy Law…
Food Liability Law
The Food Liability Law Blog has some interesting posts, including this one that features an Oregon and Washington public health officer: “Is it Really a Food-Born Illness?” Excerpt: “At…
Halloween: A Trick or Treat Bag of Laws
Google Scholar or ask a Law Librarian.) 8) “The Paradox of Inclusion by Exclusion: The Accommodation of Religion in the Public Schools,” 40. Indiana Law Review 499….
May the Best Decision Win: Hackers, Worms, Power, and Digital Law
…court, the judge, court administrators, archivists all have to duke it out when lawyers and judges each bring different versions of cited cases to their trials or when they cite…
Skip Tracing (aka Public Sleuthing) at King County Law Library (Seattle, WA)
If you can’t make it to the King County (Seattle) Law Library (KCLL) class, you may still partake of their law librarian generosity: you can read class handouts, including…
Oregon County Law Library Conference Rooms
A few Oregon county law libraries have conference rooms for use by lawyers and clients (and self-represented litigants) who need gathering space for depositions, teleconferences, or meetings…
Oregon Legal Research Blog

