As more legal research is conducted online, it is reasonable to conclude that there will be a corresponding increase in citations to the Internet by judges in their opinions. With the widespread public use of the Internet to access information along with the constant changes and impermanence of websites, citing to the Internet should be an issue of increasing concern to the legal community across the country. This paper surveys the types of Internet sources the Washington state Supreme Court and Appellate Court justices are citing. It discusses the interrelated issues of link rot and the impermanence of web pages, citation format, authentication and preservation of online electronic legal information
This Article presents a theory of judicial notice for the information age. It argues that the ease o...
Vols. 2, 4-7 have title: Reports of cases argued and determined in the Supreme Court and in the Cour...
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...
Citations are the cornerstone upon which judicial opinions and law review articles stand. Within thi...
Citations are the cornerstone upon which judicial opinions and law review articles stand. Within thi...
A close examination of the citation practices of the California and United States Supreme Courts fro...
A review of online guides to legal citation including the Legal Information Institute's Basic Legal ...
How can Internet research be used properly and reliably in law? This paper analyzes several key and ...
783 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1998.Faced with the increasing pop...
The article examines the role and importance of Internet sources in modern legal research. The main ...
The recent transformation of legal information has led to more drastic consequences in law than in s...
In the not so distant past, before the Internet, doing legal research necessitated access to either ...
In the United States today, digital versions of current decisions, bills, statutes, and regulations ...
SUMMARY. Scholarship, including legal scholarship, depends on the reliability of sources used so tha...
This Article presents a theory of judicial notice for the information age. It argues that the ease o...
Vols. 2, 4-7 have title: Reports of cases argued and determined in the Supreme Court and in the Cour...
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...
Citations are the cornerstone upon which judicial opinions and law review articles stand. Within thi...
Citations are the cornerstone upon which judicial opinions and law review articles stand. Within thi...
A close examination of the citation practices of the California and United States Supreme Courts fro...
A review of online guides to legal citation including the Legal Information Institute's Basic Legal ...
How can Internet research be used properly and reliably in law? This paper analyzes several key and ...
783 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1998.Faced with the increasing pop...
The article examines the role and importance of Internet sources in modern legal research. The main ...
The recent transformation of legal information has led to more drastic consequences in law than in s...
In the not so distant past, before the Internet, doing legal research necessitated access to either ...
In the United States today, digital versions of current decisions, bills, statutes, and regulations ...
SUMMARY. Scholarship, including legal scholarship, depends on the reliability of sources used so tha...
This Article presents a theory of judicial notice for the information age. It argues that the ease o...
Vols. 2, 4-7 have title: Reports of cases argued and determined in the Supreme Court and in the Cour...
Scholarship, including legal scholarship, depends on the reliability of sources used so that subsequ...