Category «Legal Research»

State Laws on the Web

Recent postings on the ABA SOLOSEZ listserv highlighted two useful resources for state law research, each compiled by members. From Bob Ambrogi, State Laws On The Internet, and from Frank J. Kautz II, A Directory of States that includes links to: state homepages, state courts, state statutes, state bar homepages, state consumer protection resources, and …

Subjects: E-Government, Legal Research, Legislation

Congressional Quarterly's Redesigned Portal

Congressional Quarterly’s legislative tracking tool, CQ.com, recently launched a re-designed portal with new features and enhanced services for subscribers, such as realtime breaking and analysis, a more user friendly interface, and options to personalize customer tracking and monitoring preferences using a “My CQ” feature. See the press release here.

Subjects: Legal Research, Legislation

News Aggregators Become Mainstream

J.D. Lasica, blogger and senior editor for the Online Journalism Review, details the advantages of the increasingly popular free and fee-based news aggregator applications in News That Comes to You. These programs allow researchers who are suffering from information overload to scan headlines chosen from among thousands of news feeds that use RSS (Rich Site …

Subjects: Internet, Legal Research, RSS

Guides to Federal Register, CFR and Legislative History Research

The Assistant Law Librarian of the Federal Reserve Board Law Library, Richard J. McKinney, has updated his two valuable guides (both in PDF) for legal researchers: Research Guide to the Federal Register and the Code of Federal Regulations and Federal Legislative History Research, A Practitioner’s Guide to Compiling the Documents and Sifting for Legislative Intent …

Subjects: Legal Research

Supreme Court Rules in Favor of Nextwave

NextWave has prevailed in their case to maintain wireless spectrum licenses purchased from the FCC prior to its bankruptcy reorganization. An article on the decision from AP is here. The NextWave press release is here, and a copy of the decision is here. The Supreme Court oral argument transcript is here.

Subjects: Legal Research

Open-Source Encyclopedia

The first web-based open source encyclopedia, Wikipedia, celebrated its second anniversary with the milestone of publishing 100,000 articles in its English language version, all contributed by volunteers who maintain a non-partisan perspective. See this Wired article for background on this resource that is well worth a visit.

Subjects: Legal Research

Reverse Number Lookup

Do you ever jot down a telephone number and forget to note the name associated with it? I sure do. Here is a quick, easy to use, free Reverse Number Lookup service from Verizon that requires only that you type in a ten digit telephone number to obtain the name and address of the owner, …

Subjects: Legal Research

Digital National Security Archive

The Digital National Security Archive currently hosts 35,000 declassified documents, comprising 15 distinct collections on U.S. security policies and decision making. For example, you may access documents from the Cuban Missle Crisis, Iran-Contra Affair, and Presidential Directives on National Security from Truman to Clinton. There is also a Documents of the Month section, and the …

Subjects: Freedom of Information, Government Documents, Legal Research