Despite law students\u27 reliance on electronic sources for legal research, a survey confirmed that many journals make their staff members check authors\u27 citations against paper sources. Rumsey and Schwartz argue that the advent of image-based document collections should change this practice, making life easier for law students and law school librarians
A review of online guides to legal citation including the Legal Information Institute's Basic Legal ...
This Article brings a fresh perspective to the ongoing conversation about legal citation format; by ...
This article explores the extent to which university libraries still teach undergraduates how to use...
Despite law students\u27 reliance on electronic sources for legal research, a survey confirmed that ...
Despite law students ’ reliance on electronic sources for legal research, a sur-vey confirmed that m...
The legal profession is presently engaged in an uncontrolled experiment. Attorneys now locate and ac...
There are two major challenges for successfully collecting cites to legal publication: -Even if the ...
Prevailing citation practice in law journals is to use uniform resource locators (URLs) when citing ...
Recent pedagogical, economic, and technological changes require law schools to reevaluate their reso...
The legal profession is presently engaged in an uncontrolled experiment. Attorneys now locate and a...
Paper delivered at the NCAIR Conference on Electronic Publishing May 1991The paper explores the adv...
An increasing number of U.S. law journals post at least current issues in freely accessible PDF and...
SUMMARY. Scholarship, including legal scholarship, depends on the reliability of sources used so tha...
Scholarship, including legal scholarship, depends on the reliability of sources used so that subsequ...
As more legal research is conducted online, it is reasonable to conclude that there will be a corres...
A review of online guides to legal citation including the Legal Information Institute's Basic Legal ...
This Article brings a fresh perspective to the ongoing conversation about legal citation format; by ...
This article explores the extent to which university libraries still teach undergraduates how to use...
Despite law students\u27 reliance on electronic sources for legal research, a survey confirmed that ...
Despite law students ’ reliance on electronic sources for legal research, a sur-vey confirmed that m...
The legal profession is presently engaged in an uncontrolled experiment. Attorneys now locate and ac...
There are two major challenges for successfully collecting cites to legal publication: -Even if the ...
Prevailing citation practice in law journals is to use uniform resource locators (URLs) when citing ...
Recent pedagogical, economic, and technological changes require law schools to reevaluate their reso...
The legal profession is presently engaged in an uncontrolled experiment. Attorneys now locate and a...
Paper delivered at the NCAIR Conference on Electronic Publishing May 1991The paper explores the adv...
An increasing number of U.S. law journals post at least current issues in freely accessible PDF and...
SUMMARY. Scholarship, including legal scholarship, depends on the reliability of sources used so tha...
Scholarship, including legal scholarship, depends on the reliability of sources used so that subsequ...
As more legal research is conducted online, it is reasonable to conclude that there will be a corres...
A review of online guides to legal citation including the Legal Information Institute's Basic Legal ...
This Article brings a fresh perspective to the ongoing conversation about legal citation format; by ...
This article explores the extent to which university libraries still teach undergraduates how to use...