Answering legal reference questions can be challenging, especially when you are not doing it on a daily basis. More and more legal information is available freely on the internet, but sometimes it is hard to know what the best sources are and how to make certain you are not accidentally practicing law at the reference desk. This presentation provides exposure to helpful internet resources and discussion of effective strategies to help you answer legal related reference questions in a non-law library setting with skill and confidence
Describes several useful specialized databases available to University of Georgia law students
This paper evaluates the provision of digital reference services by academic law libraries to interd...
The three sites I will discuss are FindLaw, GPO Access, and the Legal Information Institute at Corne...
Answering legal reference questions can be challenging, especially when you are not doing it on a d...
Answering legal reference questions can be challenging, especially when you are not doing it on a d...
Abstract This article offers reference librarians practical advice on how to approach legal informat...
Presentation by Maureen Cahill, Student Services Librarian, as part of the library\u27s Lunch-n-Lear...
As part of UGA Summer Academy Legal Camp two law librarians teamed up to give an introduction to leg...
There\u27s more to the library than books and a pretty view! Come learn about the useful and not-so-...
A review of online guides to legal citation including the Legal Information Institute's Basic Legal ...
In the not so distant past, before the Internet, doing legal research necessitated access to either ...
Presentation at the 2007 Georgia Council of Media Organizations Conference, Jekyll Island, GA, Octob...
Internet Legal Research presentations include: Google and Beyond: Finding Information Using Search...
DipLawMatic Dialogues is a blog published by the FCIL Special Interest Section of the American Assoc...
This chapter identifies reference resources that might be useful to attorneys and other legal resear...
Describes several useful specialized databases available to University of Georgia law students
This paper evaluates the provision of digital reference services by academic law libraries to interd...
The three sites I will discuss are FindLaw, GPO Access, and the Legal Information Institute at Corne...
Answering legal reference questions can be challenging, especially when you are not doing it on a d...
Answering legal reference questions can be challenging, especially when you are not doing it on a d...
Abstract This article offers reference librarians practical advice on how to approach legal informat...
Presentation by Maureen Cahill, Student Services Librarian, as part of the library\u27s Lunch-n-Lear...
As part of UGA Summer Academy Legal Camp two law librarians teamed up to give an introduction to leg...
There\u27s more to the library than books and a pretty view! Come learn about the useful and not-so-...
A review of online guides to legal citation including the Legal Information Institute's Basic Legal ...
In the not so distant past, before the Internet, doing legal research necessitated access to either ...
Presentation at the 2007 Georgia Council of Media Organizations Conference, Jekyll Island, GA, Octob...
Internet Legal Research presentations include: Google and Beyond: Finding Information Using Search...
DipLawMatic Dialogues is a blog published by the FCIL Special Interest Section of the American Assoc...
This chapter identifies reference resources that might be useful to attorneys and other legal resear...
Describes several useful specialized databases available to University of Georgia law students
This paper evaluates the provision of digital reference services by academic law libraries to interd...
The three sites I will discuss are FindLaw, GPO Access, and the Legal Information Institute at Corne...