Connecting users to the best available sources of legal information is one of the traditional functions of the law library. These sources now include Web sites, electronic journals, and subscription databases. This article explores the best way to bring these useful Internet resources to the attention of users, concentrating on the pros and cons of using the catalog or the home page
This presentation discusses issues for law libraries and how law libraries can capture and preserve ...
Learn how to use this powerful content management application for research and to organize projects....
Mbooks are open-access, digitized books freely available on the Internet. This article describes the...
Connecting users to the best available sources of legal information is one of the traditional functi...
Connecting users to the best available sources of legal information is one of the traditional functi...
Web-based online public access catalogs (OPACs) enable catalogers to provide hotlinks to Internet-ba...
In this chapter, the authors explore possible avenues for innovation in the library???s most basic p...
As law schools build interactive web sites for teaching and administrative functions, law libraries ...
Quality in online catalogs is generally presumed to be high. Ms. Briscoe examined a number of online...
For well over a century, the catalog has served libraries and their users as a guide and index to pu...
Ms. Zwirner outlines some of the challenges facing the researcher in deciding which resources to use...
In the not so distant past, before the Internet, doing legal research necessitated access to either ...
The World Wide Web has rapidly evolved from a technological into a social medium. Web 2.0 has become...
In recent years law library Web sites have become an increasing presence on the Internet. In a recen...
This chapter describes means for selecting websites and the resources needed to add them to online c...
This presentation discusses issues for law libraries and how law libraries can capture and preserve ...
Learn how to use this powerful content management application for research and to organize projects....
Mbooks are open-access, digitized books freely available on the Internet. This article describes the...
Connecting users to the best available sources of legal information is one of the traditional functi...
Connecting users to the best available sources of legal information is one of the traditional functi...
Web-based online public access catalogs (OPACs) enable catalogers to provide hotlinks to Internet-ba...
In this chapter, the authors explore possible avenues for innovation in the library???s most basic p...
As law schools build interactive web sites for teaching and administrative functions, law libraries ...
Quality in online catalogs is generally presumed to be high. Ms. Briscoe examined a number of online...
For well over a century, the catalog has served libraries and their users as a guide and index to pu...
Ms. Zwirner outlines some of the challenges facing the researcher in deciding which resources to use...
In the not so distant past, before the Internet, doing legal research necessitated access to either ...
The World Wide Web has rapidly evolved from a technological into a social medium. Web 2.0 has become...
In recent years law library Web sites have become an increasing presence on the Internet. In a recen...
This chapter describes means for selecting websites and the resources needed to add them to online c...
This presentation discusses issues for law libraries and how law libraries can capture and preserve ...
Learn how to use this powerful content management application for research and to organize projects....
Mbooks are open-access, digitized books freely available on the Internet. This article describes the...