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Full-Text Articles in Law

Enriching The Vocabulary Of Law: New Legal Subject Headings, Suzanne R. Graham, George Prager Nov 2012

Enriching The Vocabulary Of Law: New Legal Subject Headings, Suzanne R. Graham, George Prager

Articles, Chapters and Online Publications

No abstract provided.


Universal Citation In Sixty Seconds, Anne Burnett Jul 2012

Universal Citation In Sixty Seconds, Anne Burnett

Presentations

A large format infographic describing the system for citation which permits reference to legal or law-related information in any medium without requiring reference to proprietary products. Includes a timeline of the Universal Citation Guide from 1993 to 2012, citation elements, a list of states and territories that adopted the practice and an interactive QR code for accessing AALL's page on this citation format. The poster also encouraged viewers to advocate for adopting Universal citation with judges, attorneys and legislators.


Will An Institutional Repository Hurt My Ssrn Ranking?: Calming The Faculty Fear, Carol A. Watson, James M. Donovan Apr 2012

Will An Institutional Repository Hurt My Ssrn Ranking?: Calming The Faculty Fear, Carol A. Watson, James M. Donovan

Articles, Chapters and Online Publications

Argues that faculty members should not view hits to their works in an institutional repository as a drain on their Social Science Research Network rankings. While SSRN excels at delivering their work to the cadre of legal specialists, IRs typically do a better job of presenting it to a broader readership. This expanded exposure should be judged a positive complementary benefit.


Checking Bankruptcy Court? There’S An App For That: Mobile Technology For The Legal Professional, Jason Tubinis Mar 2012

Checking Bankruptcy Court? There’S An App For That: Mobile Technology For The Legal Professional, Jason Tubinis

Continuing Legal Education Presentations

Provides descriptions of useful computer programs designed to add functionality or perform particular tasks (apps), specifically designed to aid attorneys in their practice. Includes subscription-based apps, primary material apps, and general legal apps of special merit.


J Is For Jurisprudence: An Alphabet Of Websites For Lawyers, Wendy E. Moore Mar 2012

J Is For Jurisprudence: An Alphabet Of Websites For Lawyers, Wendy E. Moore

Continuing Legal Education Presentations

Contains an alphabetical list of 26 websites, each of which contains worthwhile information for one’s research or professional development. While not exhaustive, features topical legal blogs, Federal and state government websites, free legal information from both commercial and not-for-profit organizations, educational resources, and helpful non-legal research tools.


In Real Time: Tips For Fast, Effective Internet Searches, Suzanne R. Graham Mar 2012

In Real Time: Tips For Fast, Effective Internet Searches, Suzanne R. Graham

Continuing Legal Education Presentations

Modern search engine searches are free and so fast that trial-and-error or try-assess-and-try-again seem reasonable approaches. However, when a single known result is desired, patience is short or the viewable screen is too small to make scrolling desirable there are a variety of handy tools and techniques to use to get the best out of the Web.Tips focus on using commonly-used search operators in Google and Bing, setting up bookmarks/favorites in browsers, and creating a personalized internet portal.


Formulating A Research Plan, Maureen Cahill, Tj Striepe Jan 2012

Formulating A Research Plan, Maureen Cahill, Tj Striepe

Presentations

Presentation, delivered to clinic and externship students on January 30 and February 1, 2012, on formulating a research plan.


Alexander Campbell King Law Library Strategic Plan, 2012-2015, University Of Georgia Law Library Jan 2012

Alexander Campbell King Law Library Strategic Plan, 2012-2015, University Of Georgia Law Library

Strategic Plan Documents

The University of Georgia Law Library created a three page strategic planning document to serve as their guide from 2012 to 2015. This plan was much shorter than the previous plan, with four major goals instead of five. Each goal still contained objectives, and at the start of the plan the library separately identified a clear mission and vision statement with values up front and strategic areas preceding each goal.