This outline is an attempt to synthesize the issues surrounding the ambitious project of the Durham Statement on Open Access to Legal Scholarship into a coherent, though still quite preliminary solution. At the heart is the conviction that the problems of digital publishing are best solved by a stable and open organization of and by the stakeholders
Open access to scholarship, that is, making scholarship freely available to the public via the Inter...
When the Academic Council at Duke University adopted an open access policy in March 2010, they both ...
On March 10, 2006, the Lewis & Clark Law Review sponsored a day-long symposium entitled Open Access ...
The Durham Statement on Open Access to Legal Scholarship calls for US law schools to stop publishing...
The Durham Statement on Open Access to Legal Scholarship, drafted by a group of academic law library...
This response to The Durham Statement Two Years Later, published in the Winter 2011 issue of Law Lib...
Legal Scholarship in the Digital Domain: A Technical Roadmap for implementing the Durham Statemen
Announcement of the regular Internet distribution of faculty papers by the Legal Information Institu...
This article focuses on the importance of free and open access to legal scholarship and commentary o...
This is a PDF of the slide presentation given by the authors at the 2012 CALI Conference for Law Sch...
The open access movement in legal scholarship, inasmuch as it is driven within the law library commu...
Open access to scholarship, that is, making scholarship freely available to the public via the Inter...
This article discusses the responsibilities of legal scholars to make their published works openly a...
Readers, authors, and even law journal publishers will all achieve their different but related inter...
The open access movement seeks to change our approach to the distribution of scholarship in the fi...
Open access to scholarship, that is, making scholarship freely available to the public via the Inter...
When the Academic Council at Duke University adopted an open access policy in March 2010, they both ...
On March 10, 2006, the Lewis & Clark Law Review sponsored a day-long symposium entitled Open Access ...
The Durham Statement on Open Access to Legal Scholarship calls for US law schools to stop publishing...
The Durham Statement on Open Access to Legal Scholarship, drafted by a group of academic law library...
This response to The Durham Statement Two Years Later, published in the Winter 2011 issue of Law Lib...
Legal Scholarship in the Digital Domain: A Technical Roadmap for implementing the Durham Statemen
Announcement of the regular Internet distribution of faculty papers by the Legal Information Institu...
This article focuses on the importance of free and open access to legal scholarship and commentary o...
This is a PDF of the slide presentation given by the authors at the 2012 CALI Conference for Law Sch...
The open access movement in legal scholarship, inasmuch as it is driven within the law library commu...
Open access to scholarship, that is, making scholarship freely available to the public via the Inter...
This article discusses the responsibilities of legal scholars to make their published works openly a...
Readers, authors, and even law journal publishers will all achieve their different but related inter...
The open access movement seeks to change our approach to the distribution of scholarship in the fi...
Open access to scholarship, that is, making scholarship freely available to the public via the Inter...
When the Academic Council at Duke University adopted an open access policy in March 2010, they both ...
On March 10, 2006, the Lewis & Clark Law Review sponsored a day-long symposium entitled Open Access ...