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Articles 391 - 409 of 409

Full-Text Articles in Law

Federal Economic Regulation Through Wage And Price Control Programs: 1917–1980 A Selected Bibliography, Bernard D. Reams Jr. Jan 1981

Federal Economic Regulation Through Wage And Price Control Programs: 1917–1980 A Selected Bibliography, Bernard D. Reams Jr.

Faculty Articles

A significant portion of the law of the United States is currently embodied in, formed by, or effectuated through the rules, regulations, programs, and policies of governmental agencies. Early legal decisions on economic stability issues were made by administrative bureaus, boards and commissions, and many were rarely reviewed by courts, reported in newspapers or examined by scholars. Most administrators’ decision were made informally, undramatically, in the deep recesses of their bureaus. Many of their records rested unrecognized and poorly indexed in official government documents or in the National Archives.

For researchers attempting to bring together the materials involved in legislating …


Reference Guides To State Legal Bibliography: A Composite Review, Marvin R. Anderson Oct 1978

Reference Guides To State Legal Bibliography: A Composite Review, Marvin R. Anderson

Vanderbilt Law Review

At present, the curriculum at almost all law schools includes a first-year course teaching the fundamentals of the legal method.The practical value of these courses, however, has been questioned. One criticism of the current course structure is the overemphasis placed on the basics of legal research and legal writing to the detriment of legal bibliography.More pertinent to this review is another practice of these classes-the use of certain national-in-scope legal research texts that cannot treat fully the many special characteristics of published legal materials in the various states. To know that states have similar publishing practices for codes, session laws, …


Legal Documentation And Research, Jurij Fedynskyj, John H. Crabb Jan 1978

Legal Documentation And Research, Jurij Fedynskyj, John H. Crabb

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


If We Can't Teach Our Students To Write... Let's Examine Some Alternatives That May Have A Chance To Work, Michael Botein Jan 1977

If We Can't Teach Our Students To Write... Let's Examine Some Alternatives That May Have A Chance To Work, Michael Botein

Articles & Chapters

No abstract provided.


Book Review: A Canadian Indian Bibliography 1960-1970, Murray B. Stewart Jan 1976

Book Review: A Canadian Indian Bibliography 1960-1970, Murray B. Stewart

American Indian Law Review

No abstract provided.


Indiana University Seminar In Jurimetrics, F. Reed Dickerson, Robert Birmingham, Joseph Brodley Jan 1972

Indiana University Seminar In Jurimetrics, F. Reed Dickerson, Robert Birmingham, Joseph Brodley

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Information Science Techniques For Legal Searching, Deborah C. Goshien Jan 1972

Information Science Techniques For Legal Searching, Deborah C. Goshien

Cleveland State Law Review

Information scientific methods can be combined with current legal searching techniques to improve the usefulness and cost-effectiveness of computerized legal research. By combining methods from several disciplines, the lawyer-user may be enabled to locate relevant material that might be missed in either a manual or a straight word-byword computer search.


Computer Systems For Research, Layman E. Allen Jan 1971

Computer Systems For Research, Layman E. Allen

Book Chapters

The legal communication network today is characterized by two features. Any communication network in this century is marked by a division between the extent to which there is a man involved and the extent to which there is a machine involved. And, in terms of emphasis at this stage of things, at least within law, the emphasis is heavily upon the man communicating messages and relatively less upon the machine. The interesting question is, What is going on within this network that is amenable to being handled by machine and what, among those things, is it wise to do that …


A Case For Computers In Law Practice, Donald J. Elardo Jan 1968

A Case For Computers In Law Practice, Donald J. Elardo

Cleveland State Law Review

There is no profession which has more to gain from dramatic new technological developments for the automation of information than the legal profession.


Plainol Citations By Louisiana Courts: 1959-1966, Joseph Dainow Feb 1967

Plainol Citations By Louisiana Courts: 1959-1966, Joseph Dainow

Louisiana Law Review

No abstract provided.


Legal Research--Computer Retrieval Of Statutory Law And Decisional Law, David T. Moody Jun 1966

Legal Research--Computer Retrieval Of Statutory Law And Decisional Law, David T. Moody

Vanderbilt Law Review

Legal research presently involves a considerable amount of any lawyer's time and efforts largely because it is a slow and tedious process. Searching for a pertinent legal point can prove to be time-consuming and often fruitless. Moreover, it is here that chance plays one of its largest roles in the law.' An important legal point may exist,yet the researcher may fail to find it although he exercises a great degree of diligence. All lawyers must recognize this problem and the fact that it is becoming more acute with the passage of time. Something needs to be done to facilitate legal …


A Personal Research System, F. Reed Dickerson Jan 1963

A Personal Research System, F. Reed Dickerson

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Electronic Computers And The Practical Lawyer, F. Reed Dickerson Jan 1962

Electronic Computers And The Practical Lawyer, F. Reed Dickerson

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Aims And Methods Of Legal Research, Wilfred J. Ritz Mar 1958

Aims And Methods Of Legal Research, Wilfred J. Ritz

Washington and Lee Law Review

No abstract provided.


Problem Of Selection In Law Libraries, Theodore Samore Jan 1958

Problem Of Selection In Law Libraries, Theodore Samore

Cleveland State Law Review

Law libraries, like soap, come in three sizes -large, giant, and super. It is also true that law libraries, like taxes, living expenses, populations and college enrollments are rapidly expanding and the end is not in sight. Use determines the growth of a library. As long as students, professors and practitioners ask for more books, more periodicals and more services the library must expand.


How To Find And Use Federal Legislative Materials, Robert K. Emerson, Frank L. Fuller Iii Mar 1949

How To Find And Use Federal Legislative Materials, Robert K. Emerson, Frank L. Fuller Iii

West Virginia Law Review

No abstract provided.


On Research In Law - A Challenge And A Proposal, Jerome Hall Mar 1940

On Research In Law - A Challenge And A Proposal, Jerome Hall

Louisiana Law Review

No abstract provided.


On Research In Law -- A Challenge And A Proposal, Jerome Hall Jan 1940

On Research In Law -- A Challenge And A Proposal, Jerome Hall

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


What Should The American Law Institute Do?, Hessel E. Yntema Feb 1936

What Should The American Law Institute Do?, Hessel E. Yntema

Michigan Law Review

It will generally be agreed, I believe, that the creation of the American Law Institute in 1923 was one of the most hopeful events in the recent legal history of this country. The plan for the Institute, as formulated in the impressive report which motivated its establishment, was well-conceived, broad-visioned, and based upon a comprehensive analysis of the chief defects in the legal system of the United States. This plan was significant in at least three important respects. In the first place, it defined an ambitious and, in some respects, a unique task for the Institute to accomplish; the report …