May 2021 Law Librarian Top Blawgs
Features law, marketing, Internet legal resources and technology news. By Sabrina I. Pacifici.
Features notices of new Opinions and Orders from the Montana Supreme Court, library announcements, research tips, and Montana legal news.
Features law-related calls for papers, conferences and workshops. From the Ohio State Moritz College of Law, University of Georgia School of Law, University of Pittsburgh School of Law and University of Washington School of Law.
A Canadian cooperative weblog on all things legal.
Summaries of recent Wyoming Supreme Court decisions and law library information. From the Wyoming State Law Library.
News and information gateway to web based services provided by the New York State Supreme Court Criminal Term Library in New York County.
Features research tips and law library news. From the Howard W. Hunter Law Library at the J. Reuben Clark Law School at Brigham Young University.
Covers library acquisitions, book talks, and administrative news.
Offers news items and resources relating to trial advocacy, with a focus on Washington State. By Mary Whisner.
Covers criminal law, information technology and news for law librarians. By David Badertscher.
By the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Law Library.
From the Dallas Association of Law Librarians.
Features information about and links to Oregon Legal Research resources, in addition to comments about cases, statutes, and interesting events in the world of legal research and law libraries. By Laura Orr.
Covers technology and legal research.
Seeks to inform the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law community about key legal education, research, practice, and law library news, with a particular focus on Cuyahoga County and Ohio as well as faculty research interests.
Features legal research news. By Michel-Adrien Sheppard.
Thoughts on the present and future of legal information, legal research, and legal education. From Jim Milles, BJ Kaufman, Betsy McKenzie, Linda Ryan, Marie S. Newman, Greg Laughlin, Ann Puckett, Gail Daly and Jacqueline Cantwell.
Covers current legal trends, collecting for the largest law library in the world, a British perspective, a perspective from New Zealand, legislative developments in THOMAS, and cultural intelligence and the law.
Describes the interplay between legal responses to exogenous change and the law's own endogenous capacity for adaptation. By Louis D. Brandeis Dean Jim Chen.