February 2024 Law Librarian Top Blawgs
Law school information and legal research blog of the Mendik Library of New York Law School.
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.
Covers key legal-education, research, practice, and law-library news. From the John J. Ross-William C. Blakley Law Library of the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University.
Westminster Law Library's news and updates. Includes legal research tips, updates on resources (books, databases, websites etc.), event announcements and a news feed from Jurist. For the University of Denver's Sturm College of Law community.
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.
Covers legal research. By the Texas Tech Law Library.
Provides news and views on matters of interest to the Brooklyn Law School community.
Features news and views from Ernester, the Hofstra School of Law Deane Law Library Virtual Cat.
Covers Native American legal issues, published by the National Indian Law Library, a public law library devoted to federal Indian and tribal law.
Covers knowledge management.
Features library news and legal research tips. From the Marian Gould Gallagher Law Library of the University of Washington School of Law.
Covers technology and legal research.
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.
Features news, tips, and information about Oregon legal research.
Features legal research news. By Michel-Adrien Sheppard.
Information and insight on the laws governing federal, state and local elections. By the Moritz College of 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.
Shares items of interest with its user base of law students, law faculty, and the general public in South Carolina.