Journal•ISSN: 0023-9283
Law Library Journal
About: Law Library Journal is an academic journal. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Legal research & Law library. It has an ISSN identifier of 0023-9283. Over the lifetime, 402 publications have been published receiving 1972 citations.
Topics: Legal research, Law library, Scholarship, Practice of law, Supreme court
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the dangerous use of citations to Web sources in law review articles was examined and only 30% of the citations still work after four years of citations being used in articles.
Abstract: Ms. Rumsey examines the dangerous use of citations to Web sources in law
review articles. URLs in law review citations suffer from �link rot� because
Web pages disappear or URLs change. After four years, only 30% still work.
Writers and editors can reduce but not eliminate this problem.
81 citations
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TL;DR: Danner examines the literature of the professions for insight into the workplace relationships among librarians and other information professionals, focusing on how increasing reliance on information technologies will affect the future roles of all information professions.
Abstract: Professor Danner examines the literature of the professions for insight into the workplace relationships among librarians and other information professionals, focusing on how increasing reliance on information technologies will affect the future roles of all information professions, while leading to greater convergence of responsibilities and practices for librarians and information technologists.
43 citations
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42 citations
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TL;DR: Mr. Vreeland suggests the use of citation analysis as an appropriate objective standard for measuring and evaluating law library Web sites.
Abstract: Mr. Vreeland suggests the use of citation analysis as an appropriate objective
standard for measuring and evaluating law library Web sites.
39 citations
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TL;DR: The authors collected and annotated books and journal articles about the common doctrine of coverture, which held that a wife had no legal standing because her being was completely incorporated into that of her husband.
Abstract: This research guide collects and annotates books and journal articles about
the common doctrine of coverture, which held that a wife had no legal standing
because her being was completely incorporated into that of her husband.
The doctrine was imported from England into Colonial America and has not
yet disappeared from the law.
38 citations