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
As more legal research is conducted online, it is reasonable to conclude that there will be a corres...
The details vary from law review to law review, but typically, an accepted article is edited three t...
This white paper is a collaborative endeavor of many individuals, including members of the American ...
Despite law students ’ reliance on electronic sources for legal research, a sur-vey confirmed that m...
Despite law students\u27 reliance on electronic sources for legal research, a survey confirmed that ...
Prevailing citation practice in law journals is to use uniform resource locators (URLs) when citing ...
This article addresses the purpose of legal citations and presents a case for reforming citations in...
This article looks at the phenomenon of legal citation and its unintended consequences. After consid...
This article looks at the phenomenon of legal citation and its unintended consequences. After consi...
While law review articles are preserved in fee-based databases such as Westlaw and Lexis and thus ar...
A review of online guides to legal citation including the Legal Information Institute's Basic Legal ...
Ms. Whisner begins a year of exploring how legal scholarship citation counts are created and viewed....
Recent pedagogical, economic, and technological changes require law schools to reevaluate their reso...
An increasing number of U.S. law journals post at least current issues in freely accessible PDF and...
There are two major challenges for successfully collecting cites to legal publication: -Even if the ...
As more legal research is conducted online, it is reasonable to conclude that there will be a corres...
The details vary from law review to law review, but typically, an accepted article is edited three t...
This white paper is a collaborative endeavor of many individuals, including members of the American ...
Despite law students ’ reliance on electronic sources for legal research, a sur-vey confirmed that m...
Despite law students\u27 reliance on electronic sources for legal research, a survey confirmed that ...
Prevailing citation practice in law journals is to use uniform resource locators (URLs) when citing ...
This article addresses the purpose of legal citations and presents a case for reforming citations in...
This article looks at the phenomenon of legal citation and its unintended consequences. After consid...
This article looks at the phenomenon of legal citation and its unintended consequences. After consi...
While law review articles are preserved in fee-based databases such as Westlaw and Lexis and thus ar...
A review of online guides to legal citation including the Legal Information Institute's Basic Legal ...
Ms. Whisner begins a year of exploring how legal scholarship citation counts are created and viewed....
Recent pedagogical, economic, and technological changes require law schools to reevaluate their reso...
An increasing number of U.S. law journals post at least current issues in freely accessible PDF and...
There are two major challenges for successfully collecting cites to legal publication: -Even if the ...
As more legal research is conducted online, it is reasonable to conclude that there will be a corres...
The details vary from law review to law review, but typically, an accepted article is edited three t...
This white paper is a collaborative endeavor of many individuals, including members of the American ...