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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Supporting Faculty Research: A Direct Role For The Library, Margaret A. Leary Jan 1989

Supporting Faculty Research: A Direct Role For The Library, Margaret A. Leary

Articles

The primary mission of the University of Michigan Law Library is supporting faculty research and teaching. For most of the library's history, that support was indirect, aimed at building a collection that would meet present and future faculty needs. In the 1980s, however, it became clear that the law library's collection would never again be able to meet all faculty needs, or all student needs; law was no longer an isolated discipline, and we would need to supply information from many sources and in varied formats. The University of Michigan Law Library has had a faculty document delivery system for …


From Appraisal To Emotion: Differences Among Unpleasant Feelings, Phoebe C. Ellsworth, Craig A. Smith Jan 1988

From Appraisal To Emotion: Differences Among Unpleasant Feelings, Phoebe C. Ellsworth, Craig A. Smith

Articles

Recent research has indicated strong relations between people's appraisals of their circumstances and their emotional states. The present study examined these relations across a range of unpleasant situations in which subjects experienced complex emotional blends. Subjects recalled unpleasant experiences from their pasts that were associated with particular appraisals and described their appraisals and emotions during these experiences. Situations defined by particular appraisals along the human agency or situational control dimensions were reliably associated with different levels of anger, sadness, and guilt, as predicted. However, predicted differences in emotion were not observed for situations selected for appraisals along the certainty or …


Making Sense Of Modern Jurisprudence: The Paradox Of Positivism And The Challenge For Natural Law, Philip E. Soper Jan 1988

Making Sense Of Modern Jurisprudence: The Paradox Of Positivism And The Challenge For Natural Law, Philip E. Soper

Articles

Karl Llewellyn once said, referring to Roscoe Pound's work m jurisprudence, that it was difficult to tell on what level the writing proceeded: sometimes it seemed to be little more than bedtime stones for a tired bar; at other tunes it appeared to be on the level of the after-dinner speech or a thought provoking essay, neither of which were quite the "considered and buttressed scholarly discussion" that one expected to find. Llewellyn's complaint serves as a warning, though a somewhat ambiguous one, to those who give lectures on jurisprudence.

On the one hand, I do not plan to present …


How To Argue About Health Care, Don Herzog Feb 1987

How To Argue About Health Care, Don Herzog

Articles

Despite the aggressive title of this article, my goals are modest. I begin by explaining briefly what should at any rate be obvious: that health care policies inescapably raise moral and political difficulties, difficulties that no technical fix could resolve. I move on to puzzle over the connections between some of the more abstract issues of moral and political theory and medical policy: here I urge that we develop a more sustained taste for exploring the moral conflicts embedded in our current practices. Finally, I suggest a strategy for making nitty-gritty facts-from the concrete world of third-party payment, expensive technology, …


Some Questions For Republicans, Don Herzog Aug 1986

Some Questions For Republicans, Don Herzog

Articles

Even a sleepy historiographer of political theory of some future day will notice the most dramatic revision of the last 25 years or so. I refer of course to the discovery-and celebration-of civic humanism. The devilish Machiavelli of Elizabethan times has been gently set aside for "the divine Machiavel," the one who writes, "I love my native city more than my soul." And historians of political thought have lovingly traced the transmission of civic humanism from Florence to England and America, giving us a brand new past. America, we now know, was not the unthinkingly Lockean land served up by …


In Step With The Times: Law Library Keeps Up With Changes In Legal Research, Margaret A. Leary Jan 1986

In Step With The Times: Law Library Keeps Up With Changes In Legal Research, Margaret A. Leary

Articles

Change is constant in legal research. Plucknett's work describes, for example, the modem textbook replacing published case reports as the most important form of legal literature. More recently, A.B.W. Simpson has argued that the law review article has displaced the treatise. Apart from these changes, the law itself has continued to embrace concepts from other disciplines and deal with facts and methodologies of an increasingly technological society.


Alternative Methodologies In Contemporary Jurisprudence: Comments On Dworkin, Philip E. Soper Jan 1986

Alternative Methodologies In Contemporary Jurisprudence: Comments On Dworkin, Philip E. Soper

Articles

I have two brief points to make. Both involve recent developments in jurisprudence, by which I mean by and large the subject that Ronald Dworkin has just been discussing. Indeed, the first point is little more than an acknowledgement of the debt that is owed to Dworkin, not only for his specific contributions to this field, but for the implications of his work for law teaching generally.


Winning With Archimedian Principles, Henry Spira Dec 1985

Winning With Archimedian Principles, Henry Spira

Articles

No abstract provided.


Beacon Light: August 1985, St. Cloud Hospital Aug 1985

Beacon Light: August 1985, St. Cloud Hospital

Articles

  • Lifeline program provides "peace of mind" for subscriber
  • Credit Union offers many services to members
  • A look back at 1984-85
  • List of donors
  • Commentary from John Frobenius on the hospital's new affiliation with the affiliated as a partner with the Voluntary Hospitals of America (VHA)
  • Dr. Hans Engman and Robert J. Obermiller appointed to the Board of Trustees
  • No room-rate increase expected during '85-'86 fiscal year


Legal Theory And The Obligation To Obey, Philip E. Soper Jan 1984

Legal Theory And The Obligation To Obey, Philip E. Soper

Articles

Contributions to this symposium will undoubtedly share, with other recent discussions of the issue, the assumption that one does not need to decide what law is before deciding whether there is an obligation to obey it. More precisely, the assumption seems to be that our ordinary, pre-analytic understanding of "law" provides a completely adequate base for discussions about law's moral authority. The more refined disputes about the nature of law that dominate analytical jurisprudence can thus be ignored.


I Remember Them Well, Marian Gallagher, Julius J. Marke, Arthur A. Charpentier Jan 1982

I Remember Them Well, Marian Gallagher, Julius J. Marke, Arthur A. Charpentier

Articles

We who have undertaken the task of translating our AALL memories of personalities into words should not be viewed by our readers as having been present at the Narragansett Pier organizational meeting. We date from the early forties. No one now living can take any of us back to 1906. What we know of our early people we have gleaned from the Law Library Journal, and so should you, for we shall not talk of them. Ours is to be personal recollection, and we have known enough remarkable people to be content with that. Nor shall we talk of …


Some Problems With Marx's Theory Of Capitalist Penetration Into Agriculture: The Case Of Ireland, Ellen Hazelkorn Jan 1981

Some Problems With Marx's Theory Of Capitalist Penetration Into Agriculture: The Case Of Ireland, Ellen Hazelkorn

Articles

Marx and Engels's writings on Ireland are usually associated with their positive support for Irish nationalism. This article seeks to examine the extent and depth of their knowledge of Ireland, politically and economically, by focusing attention on Marx's analysis of post-famine agricultural readjustment. Comparing the latter's comments in Capitaland elsewhere with actual developments, it is suggested that Marx and Engels's understanding was less than accurate. The source of their misinterpretation lies principally with their inadequate analysis of tenants, agrarian capitalism, and land fever


Law Libraries Losing To ‘Double Inflation', Hugh D. Spitzer Jan 1980

Law Libraries Losing To ‘Double Inflation', Hugh D. Spitzer

Articles

In this short article, I will take a look at the largest law library in the Northwest, the University of Washington's facility, and outline how inflation is eating away at this particular institution. Then I will suggest some ways to cope with the problem if we want to maintain the quality of research materials which many of us are used to.


The Sun's Wind, Alexei Leonov Jan 1977

The Sun's Wind, Alexei Leonov

Articles

This book is on display here for educational purposes only.


Unless stated otherwise within this repository collection, all materials are shared under the following Creative Commons license: [Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License].

Written and illustrated in 1977 by Soviet cosmonaut Alexei Leonov.
Published by Progress Publishers in Moscow


The Law Library In A New Law School, Marian G. Gallagher Jan 1969

The Law Library In A New Law School, Marian G. Gallagher

Articles

Law school faculty members have a reputation for paying attention to their libraries. They achieved that collective reputation long ago through insistence on autonomous library administration by their own kind, and they have nurtured it by exhibiting greater dependence on libraries than the members of any other discipline. Expressions of their concern and involvement are recorded repeatedly in annual reports, budget justifications, fund-raising brochures, and the proceedings of ceremonial cornerstone layings. Some have gone far beyond expressions of concern, demonstrating compulsion to devote more time to the functioning of their law libraries than has seemed necessary or interesting to the …


Miles Oscar Price—The Journal Record, Marian G. Gallagher Jan 1969

Miles Oscar Price—The Journal Record, Marian G. Gallagher

Articles

Miles 0. Price was not a man possibly to be forgotten. His record of published scholarship and professional achievement will live beyond those who respected him as a colleague and mentor and cherished him as a friend. That record is conspicuous and monumental. In addition, he left us a less conspicuous record, footprints discernible in the variety of his influence over the law library profession and in the foundations he laid for its members' individual and collective accomplishments. Some of those footprints have been traced, in this issue of the Law Library Journal, by his close associates. The following recounts …


Law Librarianship Training At The University Of Washington, Marian G. Gallagher Jan 1962

Law Librarianship Training At The University Of Washington, Marian G. Gallagher

Articles

The law librarianship program at the University of Washington is built on the premise that the quality of special librarianship is enhanced by subject knowledge in the specialty, and candidates for the Master of Law Librarianship degree must be lawyers. This is not the place at which we shall set out the reasoning of those who originated that rule of selectivity or the defense of those who continue it. It should be obvious that neither the originators nor the present administrators subscribe to the theory that all professional law librarians must be lawyers. Neither do they believe that those whose …


Introduction To Library Science With Practical Problems, Marian G. Gallagher Jan 1957

Introduction To Library Science With Practical Problems, Marian G. Gallagher

Articles

What are some of the things you might expect a school of librarianship to teach you?

The author proceeds to identify: cataloging, classification, an awareness of bibliographic sources, scanning professional sources, budgets and finance, dealing with serials, and respect for details.


Publications Of Members Of The American Association Of Law Libraries: A Selected List Through 1955, Marian G. Gallagher Jan 1956

Publications Of Members Of The American Association Of Law Libraries: A Selected List Through 1955, Marian G. Gallagher

Articles

A bibliography of books and articles longer than one hundred pages.


The Law Librarian's Education And The Autonomous Library, Marian G. Gallagher Jan 1954

The Law Librarian's Education And The Autonomous Library, Marian G. Gallagher

Articles

I am concerned with a defense for the law library administrator who has been presented with serious arguments contradicting his beliefs that a law librarian's education should include both law and librarianship, and, often in issue with it, that there are special aspects of law library administration which prevent its fitting neatly into a unified library system. The frequency with which the two beliefs are attacked simultaneously results from the fact that, salary scales being in issue, librarians object more heatedly to the added cost of legal training than do lawyers to the added cost of librarianship training; when they …


The Law Librarianship Course At The University Of Washington, Marian G. Gallagher Jan 1953

The Law Librarianship Course At The University Of Washington, Marian G. Gallagher

Articles

Under the quizzing of maiden aunts, very few five-year-olds express the hope of becoming law librarians when grown. Nor have their attitudes toward the opportunities and fascination of law librarianship altered to any discernible degree by the time they begin filling out applications for admission to law school, or reach that advanced stage in legal education marked by interviews with placement officials. This profession is not one which has distinguished itself as a goal; in short, and baldly, neophyte law librarians do not walk in and apply for positions-they have to be recruited.

Voting membership for University of Washington law …


Armchair Tour Of The University Of Washington Law Library, Marian G. Gallagher Jan 1945

Armchair Tour Of The University Of Washington Law Library, Marian G. Gallagher

Articles

Bibliomania is a rare disease. Contrary to popular belief, the germ breeds, not on ancient vellum bookbindings, but on the inside pages of hard-to-locate, bound or unbound, published or unpublished, material. Consequently, the infection is not apt to spread to the practicing attorney who has too many clients and too many cases for a seven-day week. While it may be the secret hope of every librarian that years of exposure (to the bindings when help is scarce, to the inside pages when help is plentiful) will cause him to become infected, he does not lose sight of the fact that …


Law Books And Law Publishers, Arthur S. Beardsley Jan 1935

Law Books And Law Publishers, Arthur S. Beardsley

Articles

There are indications that the depression, which has burdened us for the past five years, is slowly receding. In its wake will doubtless follow renewed prosperity with all the blessings of peace and contentment. A freedom from financial worry will replace the present fear, and money will be more plentifully earned and freely expended.

It remains to be seen, however, whether the problems encountered during this economic cycle will be soon forgotten. Will the members of the legal profession and the law libraries return to their former policies of, what has appeared to be, uncontrolled and ill-advised purchasing of the …


The Law School Library—A Library Of Research For Lawyer, Layman, And Legislator, Arthur S. Beardsley Jan 1925

The Law School Library—A Library Of Research For Lawyer, Layman, And Legislator, Arthur S. Beardsley

Articles

We will probably agree that the college or university as a seat of learning must develop and maintain library facilities commensurate with the standing before the world which the institution's progress has earned. The library, and of course we include the law school library, is one of the indices of an educational institution's efficiency, and as such, we expect it to grow and expand by adding to the richness of its collections, material of ever increasing importance and usefulness. We expect the college library to take the lead in gathering for future reference the materials valuable for research which, on …


Penobscot Transformer Tales, Frank G. Speck Jan 1918

Penobscot Transformer Tales, Frank G. Speck

Articles

This article describes part of a collection of mythological texts obtained from and dictated by Newell Lion of the Penobscot tribe at Oldtown Maine to Frank G Speck.