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February 28, 2011

Crownsourcing the UK's Protection of Freedoms Bill

From the Civil Liberties and Identity Policy Unit of the Home Office's Public Reading Stage site:

The Government is committed to continuing this public engagement with the content of the Protection of Freedoms Bill. This website gives you the opportunity to comment on each clause contained in the Bill. Your comments will get collated at the end of this public consultation and fed through directly to the Parliamentarians who will carry the Bill through the House of Commons.

[JH]

February 28, 2011 in Legislation in the News, Web Communications | Permalink | Comments (0)

Supreme Court Action Today

The one opinion issued by the Supreme Court today concerns the Confrontation Clause.  It is one of those rulings where the Court analyzes the facts and circumstances of the underlying case to determine the application of the law in a different way than had come before.  Two dissents by Justices Scalia and Ginsburg take the Court to task for its departure from established law.

Police encountered a mortally wounded Covington at a gas station in Detroit.  He was shot some distance away and drove himself to the station.  Police called for medical assistance and questions Covington about what happened.  Covington told police that Bryant (the respondent in this case) had shot him at Covington's house and that he drove himself away.  The Michigan courts convicted Bryant of second degree murder but that conviction was reversed by the Michigan Supreme Court.  It held that the statements were inadmissible hearsay using other U.S. Supreme Court precedent.

The Supreme Court reversed the Michigan Supreme Court, holding that Covington's statements about Bryant were not testimonial.  Rather, their "primary purpose" was to assist the police in meeting an ongoing emergency.  The Court distinguished earlier precedent where statements were taken in non-emergency circumstances.  The underlying subject of those cases was domestic violence, which provided a different application of the Confrontation Clause.

The Court calls the the primary purpose inquiry objective, noting the existence of an "ongoing emergency" as the most important circumstance informing the primary purpose.  The Court then states that whether an emergency exists and is ongoing is a highly context-dependent inquiry.  By analyzing the facts of the underlying shooting and the police response, the Court reached its conclusion that its earlier precedent did not apply.  The dissents take the Court to task for blowing big holes in what up to now was consistent Confrontation Clause jurisprudence.  The case is Michigan v. Bryant (09-150).  [MG] 

February 28, 2011 in Court Opinions | Permalink | Comments (0)

Law Student Research Competency Task Force Hosts Blog for Comments on Draft Principles

Law Student Research Competency Task Force Hosts Blog for Comments on Draft Principles – Tuesday, March 1 through Friday, March 4th

Last November the Law Student Research Competency Task Force hosted an online discussion. The discussion very much enhanced our work.  Since then we have been drafting the report that we will submit to the Executive Board for their April meeting, in accordance with the task force's charge.  We are in the final stages and would like your comments on our draft principles.

Our draft will be available for comment on a blog.  Please go to http://researchcompetency.wordpress.com/ to comment.

We really appreciate everyone’s time and effort.  If you have any questions or comments, please contact Sally Wise.

Thank you so much.

Law Student Research Competency Task Force

[BA]

February 28, 2011 | Permalink | Comments (0)

Is Thomson Reuters Going to Be a Sponsor for AALL's Annual Meeting in Philly This Year?

I doubt AALL has quietly banned Thomson Reuters from sponsoring Philly 2011 since the Company did provide pricing information AALL asked for to produce the current edition of the Price Index. Well, let's put it this way, if AALL has banned Thomson Reuters, has anyone read anything in one of our association's official publications? Perhaps I missed it.

If I didn't miss an announcement, if AALL hasn't quietly banned Thomson Reuters from sponsorship, what wrong with the below screen capture taken on Feb. 27, 2011 from the annual meeting sponsorship web page? My first thought is AALL's web staff simply hasn't updated the page with a TR Legal banner. Considering the timeliness of AALL website updating, this is a plausible explanation. Due note, last year TR Legal was a "Silver" category sponsor and, at the moment, there is a big gaping hole in the list of "Silver" category sponsors.

A second possibility is TR Legal is still counting its pennies, trying to decide how much to contribute. This, too, is a plausible explanation. TR Legal's 2010 4Q financials were a bit nasty. Profit margin came in at 26.3%. But even West Publishing pre-acquisition sponsored AALL annual meetings and pre-acquisition West's profit margin was typically in the 25% range.

A third possibility is that Thomson Reuters simply isn't going to toss AALL any sponsorship $$. Well, buying up Latin American legal publishing and Indian legal outsourcing firms, running the parallel universe of TR Legal hosted gatherings at AALL meetings, and staffing up the exhibit hall does cost a fair amount of money. Is this a plausible explanation? Is the $255 million TR Legal earned in 2010 4Q already spent?

AALL's Sponsorship Opportunities notice does not include a deadline for vendor sponsorship committments. I quess we will just have to wait and see which of the above three explanations plays out. Of course, there is a fourth possibility, namely, realizing that the "partnership" rhetoric didn't work, TR Legal's marketing gurus just decided that institutional buyers in the Shed West Era and unexpected push-back on WestlawNext pricing means we aren't all that important in TR Legal's marketing grand scheme of things. [JH]

Aall2011sponsors20110227 
 

February 28, 2011 in Library Associations, Meetings, Publishing Industry | Permalink | Comments (0)

Today's Agenda for the Proceedings AALL Members Will Not Be Able to View for Themselves: AALL's Vendor Colloquium

From scanning AALL's website, it looks like no webcast, live or archived, will be available to uninvited AALL members for the Vendor Colloquium. In Sarah Glassmeyer's recent post, On Transparency and Openness, she wrote:

All I’m asking to know is what happens at the colloquium. Exactly what happens. Not a second-hand summary live blogged or a later recollection written by a participant. I want a straight, unfiltered accounting of what happened. And I say this with all due respect to Mark Estes who will be providing the official blog of the proceedings. I’m sure he will provide the best blog possible. But it (and later accountings) will still all be filtered through the author’s experience of the event. Nuances can be missed, comments misheard… all humans are fallible, and it can’t be a perfect recreation of the event.

In a comment to this LLB post, Sarah observed "just looking at the agenda, it looks like this is going to be mainly prepared statements...what's the harm in showing that?" The scripted comments are particularly appropriate for today's agenda; rehearsed answers for tomorrow. We all know how some vendors tend to use a lot of words to say nothing.

Betsy McKenzie adds

even if there is no live webcast, there is hope for a good amount of transparency. There are several bloggers who are attending who can be expected to blog and Twitter a good bit during the event: Mark Estes, Greg Lambert, John Mayer and Rich Leiter all blog and Twitter, and we can hope will be actively reporting live during the Colloquium.

See Betsy's highly recommended post, Why Vendor Relations are a Sore Topic with Librarians!

Cone-of-silence-1Yes, We Can Hope. Of course that assumes AALL hasn't issued some sort of blogging-tweeting moratorium during the two-day proceedings. Imagine participants receiving strict instructions to leave their 21st century communication devices outside the meeting room. Or the Internet "pipes" having been shut down at the Lodge in Oak Brook today or tomorrow.

But seriously, why the "Cone of Silence?" I know I'm showing my age but like the use of the Cone of Silence in the 1960's Get Smart comedy television series the Cone of Silence never really worked. This behind closed doors thing does not work either. All it does is lead to a later muddling of the waters re who said what to whom and when and what was the response to that, etc. Could this be an unintended or an intended consequence hoped for by AALL officialdom? I doubt our vendors are afraid to speak openly for all to hear. They have not demonstrated any fear of reprisals from the law library community in years.

Transparency is an institutional matter, easily do-able by way of early 21st century web communications and one not left to hopes that individual meeting participants blog or tweet their personal observations. That comes after the event when one can place their individual comments in a shared context of having experienced the proceedings, too.

AALL's Better Late Than Never Seriously Half-Hearted Attempt to "Open" This Meeting. AALL issued a member's call for questions last Friday. I repeat, last Friday. See AALL Spectrum Blog's Vendor Colloquium Questions & Answers

You can contribute by commenting to this blog or by emailing me (mark.estes(at)acgov.org). I will try to address questions/comments and, if appropriate, share them with the colloquium participants.

The post also provides some background reading:

See also yesterday's hurried-up AALL Spectrum Blog post, Background on the vendor colloquia series. Note the comments from John Mayer and Carl Malamud. My hunch is this recent blog posting activities is in response to the "firestorm of controversy" (quoting Betsy, below) over this meeting. At least that is a more postive, less cynical, assessment than AALL intentionally planning the timing of the publication of those posts for days when law librarians tend not to check their RSS feed, if they even take the AALL Spectrum Blog feed,

My hunch also is that the AALL Spectrum Blog will be our association's officially filtered source for reporting on today's and tomorrow's proceedings. In case you don't read the blog, here's the link. Better late than never for Friday and Sunday's posts? Ditto for any forthcoming AALL Spectrum Blog posts today and tomorrow (purely speculation on my part). As Betsy writes in her above-linked post:

There has been a firestorm of controversy after the colloquium was announced. AALL members wondered why the meeting would not be held at a regular AALL meeting, why the limited number of participants. And why the meeting seemed to be held in such a way that appeared to reduce the transparency. There is a huge amount of distrust right now between many of the members of AALL and their Executive Board, which is a very sad state of affairs, but which is illustrated by the reaction to the announcement of this colloquium.

So below is today's agenda for AALL's Vendor Colloquium or what you won't be seeing or hearing for yourself. Do note our association is spending $27,500 for the Vendor Colloquium.

What, They Can't Chew Gum and Walk at the Same Time? And why is this series of meetings not taking place at our annual meeting in Philly this year? Betsy writes

The answer to why the colloquium was not held during a regular AALL meeting seemed to be that vendors and regular members alike had so much else on their minds at the annual meeting, that they would not be able to focus on a vendor relations event during the annual meeting period or shortly after/before it.

(Emphasis added.)

Isn't this exactly the sort of meetings that would make attending our annual meetings worth the expense? [JH]

Today's Agenda for AALL's Vendor Colloquium

8:00 am: Continental breakfast

8:30 am: Welcoming Remarks: AALL President Joyce Manna Janto,

Introduction of the Facilitator, Maureen Sullivan, Introduction of Participants

9:00 am: Keynote Speaker: Roberta I. Shaffer, Law Librarian of Congress

10:00 am: Preparation for Participant Discussion and Dialogue: Maureen Sullivan

Review of the Goals for Discussion and Dialogue:

1) To discuss what information creation and dissemination mean today in light of “The Challenge” and the responses of constituent groups

2) To foster an awareness by AALL members of this new environment

3) To foster an awareness by vendors of the challenges that librarians face

4) To collaborate on developing a "Shared Principles" document that will reflect the discussion of these topics and serves as a voluntary guide for both vendors and libraries.

Review of Parameters and Procedures for Discussion

10:15 am: Break

10:30 am: Presentation 1: Each vendor provides a brief summary to address:

"What would legal publishers like to tell law librarians about their industry?"

Dialogue 1: Participants discuss their reactions to the presentations and identify common themes and concerns

11:45 am: Presentation 2: Three law librarians provide a brief summary to address:

"What would law librarians like to tell legal publishers about their institutions?"

Dialogue 2: Participants discuss their reactions to the presentations and identify common themes and concerns

12:45 pm Lunch

1:30 pm: Presentation 3: Facilitated discussion among end-user stakeholders:

“What would consumers of legal information like to tell or like to ask both librarians and publishers?”

Dialogue 3: Participants discuss their reactions to the stakeholders’ conversation and identify common themes and concerns

2:30 pm: Presentation 4: Each vendor provides a brief summary to address:

"What would legal publishers like to ask law librarians about their institutions?"

Dialogue 4: Participants discuss their reactions to the presentations and identify common themes and concerns

3:45 pm: Break

4:00 pm: Presentation 5: Three law librarians provide a brief summary to address:

"What would law librarians like to ask legal publishers about their institutions?"

Dialogue 5: Participants discuss their reactions to the presentations and identify common themes and concerns

5:15 pm: Wrap-Up: Brief overview of the day’s discussions and review of the agenda for the next day

5:30 pm: Adjournment

6:30 pm: Reception

7:30 pm: Dinner

February 28, 2011 in Library Associations, Meetings, Publishing Industry | Permalink | Comments (3)

Opening: Assistant Librarian for Collection Management and Preservation, Library of the Supreme Court of the United States

The Supreme Court of the United States has an opening for an Assistant Librarian for Collections Management and Preservation. The offical and complete announcement, including how to apply, is posted here. What follows are snips from it. Do note that the closing date is March 14, 2011 and applications are accepted via FAX.

SALARY RANGE: $89,033.00 - $140,084.00 /year
OPEN PERIOD: Tuesday, February 22, 2011 to Monday, March 14, 2011
SERIES & GRADE: GG-1410-13/14
POSITION INFORMATION: Full-Time  Permanent 
PROMOTION POTENTIAL: yes
DUTY LOCATIONS: 1 vacancy - Washington DC Metro Area, DC
WHO MAY BE CONSIDERED: Applications will be accepted from United States citizens and nationals. 

Job Summary: Department Head responsible for planning, directing and evaluating operations of the Collections Management Department, which includes supervision of six staff members, and organization and maintenance of the library collections and Chambers' materials to ensure accessibility and availability.  Responsible for preservation of the library's general collections, coordination of interlibrary loan service and loan tracking database, oversight of the document delivery budget, planning and evaluation of all automated circulation operations, and coordination of library-wide disaster recovery planning and emergency evacuation.  Responsible for administration of an offsite library Annex, including retrieval, delivery and maintenance of materials.  Participates in collection development, space planning, and department heads executive committee.  Reports directly to the Librarian of the Court.
 
Duties: Department Head responsible for planning, directing and evaluating operations of the Collections Management Department, which includes supervision of six staff members, and organization and maintenance of the library collections and Chambers' materials to ensure accessibility and availability.  Responsible for preservation of the library's general collections, coordination of interlibrary loan service and loan tracking database, oversight of the document delivery budget, planning and evaluation of all automated circulation operations, and coordination of library-wide disaster recovery planning and emergency evacuation.  Responsible for administration of an offsite library Annex, including retrieval, delivery and maintenance of materials.  Participates in collection development, space planning, and department heads executive committee.  Reports directly to the Librarian of the Court.

Qualifications Required: Master's degree in Library and Information Science from an accredited school required.  At least three years of experience as a library administrator or supervisor required. Working knowledge of Millennium or similar comprehensive library automation system  required.  Working knowledge of Interlibrary Loan functions required, including experience with OCLC.  Experience in collections management, preservation and conservation of library materials strongly preferred.  Experience with document delivery systems and knowledge of relevant issues preferred.  Employment is subject to successful completion of a security background check. 

You will need to successfully complete a background security investigation before you can be appointed into this position.

What to Expect Next: Best qualified applicants will be contacted for interviews.  All applicants will receive notification after the job has been filled.

February 28, 2011 in Employment Opportunties | Permalink | Comments (0)

February 27, 2011

Do you like your ILS?

Earlier this month, Marshall Breeding released Perception 2010: an International Survey of Library Automation which garnered over 2100 responses. 

The questions asked were centered around how satisfied libraries were with their ILS and how they rated the customer service provided by that company.

The ILS used by most of the respondants was Millennium (388) followed by Symphony /Unicorn (288) and Horizon (179).  None of these systems ranked toward the top of user satisfaction or customer service.  The three top ILS systems in all but one category were:

Of these three, both Opals and Koha are open source systems (ByWater is a support team for Koha migration and hosting).

It gives one pause.

Breeding does point out that more complex libraries with more complex automated systems will typically have mid-range rankings.  According to his commentary on the survey, it is because they will often have outstanding issues that will cause the system to fall short of the highest praise.  I suppose this is true, but I don't think it is a good explanation of why an open source system can score higher than an expensive, commercial product.  In fact, I think it should be the other way around.  Nevertheless, the survey showed very little interest for dissatisfied customers to switch to an open source solution.  This may in be in part due to needs for complex systems at larger libraries which many feel cannot be serviced by an open source solution (though, I am not sure why).

Interestingly, with respect to Millennium, "[t]he statistic that stands out the most for Millennium reflects the number of libraries indicating interest in migrating to a new ILS. This percentage has increased steadily since 2007 from 6.69% to 8.28% to 11.71% to 18.73% in 2010. The comments generally had a negative tone, many of which acknowledged the strengths of the system while complaining about the cost or lack of openness."

The ILS is probably the most critical technology component of a library.  And, it can be one of the more expensive components of a library.  And yet, there seems to be a real reluctance to critically evaluate the sacred ILS.  These vendors, unlike the Wexis's of the world, seem to get a free pass when we talk about service, cost and transparency.  It makes no sense to me.

Some of the comments I see on problems related to adopting an open source ILS are really not problems at all, but fears.  Fears have been phrased as "what if the development goes stale" and "what hidden costs am I not seeing."  You can really say the same thing about commercial providers.  Just because you are paying them, doesn't mean you won't get a crappy product.  The only true concern I have heard in this discussion is a worry over scalability.  Adopting open source means you have to plan ahead.  You have to predict the future.  These are not new skills for librarians.

Library budgets are shrinking, the way we handle information is changing, what we do with the ILS is evolving.  We need to evolve too. (VS)

February 27, 2011 in Information Technology, Polls, Products & Services | Permalink | Comments (1)

UMass School of Law Performance Better Than Expected

So how is that first public law school in Massachusetts working out?  Well enough, if this article in the South Coast Today is to be believed.  The Chancellor is quoted as saying that the school is sending $918,000 to the state and not taking any tax money.  Tuition revenues were projected to be $5.9 million but are actually $6.9 million, hence the surplus.  The school is working to receive provisional accreditation with hopes for full accreditation by the 2017-18 academic year.  Sceptics abound, including Charles Chieppo, senior fellow at the Pioneer Institute who suggests the money won't be there for physical plant improvements or programs to increase bar passage rate, all necessary for ABA approval.  Time will tell if he is right.  [MG]

February 27, 2011 in Law School News & Views | Permalink | Comments (0)

Round-Up of Practitioner Blogs

Indiana Intellectual Property Lawyer Blog
http://www.iniplaw.org
http://www.iniplaw.org/index.xml
Covers intellectual property cases, reports and news in Indiana. Published by Overhauser Law Offices, LLC.

Mississippi Lawyer Blog
http://www.mississippilawyerblog.com
http://www.mississippilawyerblog.com/index.xml
Provides insight on injury, criminal and family law cases and opinions in Mississippi. Published by Coxwell & Associates, PLLC.
 
New York Birth Injury Lawyer Blog
http://www.newyorkbirthinjurylawyerblog.com
http://www.newyorkbirthinjurylawyerblog.com/index.xml
Examines birth injury law cases, reports and news in New York. Published by Bottar Leone, PLLC.

February 27, 2011 in Web Communications | Permalink | Comments (0)

February 26, 2011

A Pick-Me-Up for the Library Blues: This Book is Overdue!

This Book Is Overdue!: How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All (P.S.)
By Marilyn Johnson

Harper Perennial; Reprint edition (January 25, 2011)
Paperback Print List Price: $14.99; Amazon Sale Price: $8.35; Kindle Price: $9.99 Price: $8.35

From BookMarks Magazine:

As book lovers themselves, reviewers happily joined Johnson in librarian hero worship. They were consistently impressed by her enthusiasm for her subject and entertained by her anecdotes about the challenges librarians face on a daily basis. Opinions differed, however, over Johnson's idea that librarians will guide us to a new era of literacy online. No one doubted the valor of Johnson's "cybrarians," but some asked if she was sufficiently critical of the drawbacks of moving information online--from the decline in American attention spans to missing the smell of a good old-fashioned binding. Enjoy this book for its look at library culture, not for its prognostications.

[JH]

February 26, 2011 in New Publications | Permalink | Comments (0)

February 25, 2011

Law School Dean Gigs: It's One of the More Thankless Jobs

Particularly if one wants to try to persuade entrenched tenured faculty to reform the legal academy but Dan Filler has posted his Law School Dean Searches 2010-11 Edition. Over 20 openings include a couple in Canada. [JH]

February 25, 2011 in Law School News & Views | Permalink | Comments (0)

Death Penalty News, there's an app for that

The Death Penalty Information Center is offering a free iPhone, iPad, and iPod Touch app which provides access to the most frequently used resources on DPIC's main website, including its Fact Sheet on the Death Penalty, Execution Database, and the most recent death penalty news from around the country. Hat tip to OSU law prof Douglas Berman who writes in his Sentencing Law & Policy post "Have your Angry Birds gone postal?  You might need the newest app, from the Death Penalty Information Center...." [JH]

February 25, 2011 in Information Technology, Products & Services | Permalink | Comments (0)

Friday Fun: "There are many reasons we need to save our libraries, not least because of their cinematic history."

The Guardian UK wonders what would replace libraries as backdrops to movie action if they went away. "Discovering the murderer on an app? Searching the shelves of … Amazon? It just won't do." The article includes a number of video clips of famous library scenes. Hat tip to LLB co-editor Mark Giangrande for this gem. [JH]

February 25, 2011 in Friday Fun | Permalink | Comments (0)

Check out the Digital Public Library of America Initiative Wiki

On December 13, 2010, the Berkman Center for Internet and Society announced that the Center is hosting an initiative for a Digital Public Library of America involving a large and diverse group of stakeholders to define the scope, architecture, costs and administration for a proposed Digital Public Library of America. To support this effort, check out the Digital Public Library of America Wiki. Note, for example, the most revised wiki pages. Participation in the development of the wiki is open to all interested parties. Hat tip to Jennifer Howard's The Chronicle article, Talking About a Digital Public Library of America. [JH]

February 25, 2011 in Current Affairs, Digital Collections, Web Communications | Permalink | Comments (0)

Updated Guide to Law Review Submission Requirements

Information for Submitting Articles to Law Reviews & Journals [SSRN] by Allen Rostron and Nancy Levit (both UMKC LAW) contains information about submitting articles to law reviews and journals, including the methods for submitting an article, any special formatting requirements, how to contact them to request an expedited review, and how to contact them to withdraw an article from consideration. It covers 202 law reviews. The document was fully updated in February 2011. [JH]

February 25, 2011 in New Publications | Permalink | Comments (0)

February 24, 2011

In The News

What with Madison, Wisconsin, embroiled in demonstrations over whether or not public employees will lose collective bargaining rights, it comes as no surprise that one of the top downloads recently at GAO is a 48 page report from 2002 called Collective Bargaining Rights: Information on the Number of Workers with and without Bargaining Rights.

Other information on the state of labor is available at the 2011 edition of the Statistical Abstract of the United States, particularly Table 665, Labor Union Membership by State:  1985 and 2009.  Wisconsin is one the states that lost union members between those dates, declining from 435,900 to 384,700.  The decline in union membership is also identified as going from 22.3% of workers to 15.2%.  Approximately 7% of workers are in the public sector.  More labor statistics are here.

The ABA is considering a move that would make the LSAT optional, according to a report in ABC News.  The ABA has granted waivers for some schools when it comes to accepting its own graduates who apply to law school.  That, viewed by some, questions the importance of the test.  The reason behind the ABA action is to help diversify law school student bodies.  The article notes statistics where test results have artificially limited minorities from attending law school.

The United States may be moving in one direction on the test.  India, on the other hand, is moving in another.  Twenty-five law colleges in India will accept results from the test administered in India by the LSAC.  That number is up from four schools last year.  India has 13 national law schools and approximately 900 law colleges.  More on this from mydigitalfc.com.

The economics of law practice may place pressure on firms to economize in their costs and the fees they charge clients.  The Wall Street Journal informs us that in these trying times there are lawyers who charge over $1,000 an hour for their time.  Obviously this is not the norm.  These individuals are few, but possess unique skill and experience to justify these charges.  Their area of expertise seem to revolve around large financial issues such as merger and acquisition.  Word of advice to law students, build up your knowledge of corporation and competition law.

Reuters has an article on what I think is the relatively new practice of doing online background checks for prospective jurors.  Armed with an online capable device, lawyers can do quick background checks on prospective jurors in social media and search engines to glean more information than what's on the questionnaire each prospect fills out.  The article describes the practice as "Google dire," which is ironic.  Google's many attempts at creating an online social experience have never really gained traction.  This development means that lawyers join the ranks of advertisers and cyber-thieves in having a need to collect and analyze social media information.  [MG]

February 24, 2011 in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Price and Kennedy Launch INFOdocket and FullTextReports

Gary Price and Shirl Kennedy, the founders and senior editors of ResourceShelf and DocuTicker for almost 10 years, have launched InfoDocket posting news and developments announcements for current awareness purposes.

INFOdocket will be our home for new or newly-discovered web resources; reference material we find interesting (lists, rankings, infographics, and factbooks, and other materials); web search tips; relevant news items from the information industry and library community; and some occasional commentary.

FullTextReports.com is the sister site of InfoDocket. There you'll find direct access to new and free full text reports from think tanks, governments around the world, academia, as well as from other sources. Details about their new ventures on LISNews. [JH]

February 24, 2011 in New Publications, Web Communications | Permalink | Comments (0)

Interested in Knowing More About How Law Librarians Are Involved in Vendor Product Development Testing and Pricing?

After reading Librarian Involvement in Product Development Testing, The CRIV Sheet, Feb. 2011 at 9, I still wanted to know how law librarians are involved in product development and pricing of legal information resources. CRIV member Mary Jenkins' interview piece with representatives from Fastcase, Lexis and Thomson Reuters provides a general overview on how each vendor addresses this matter of interest to law librarians. There are certainly some scripted, professional ego-stroking responses for the audience, ah that would be us, But the CRIV Sheet article does offer glimpses at how each vendor does some things differently. However, one is left wanting to know more in specificity and also wanting to know how BNA and Wolters Kluwer would respond to the questions posed. Follow-up article forthcoming?

This is not a critique of CRIV-member Mary Jenkins' attempt to obtain information from vendors on a subject law librarians find important. It's a good start as long as it does not end here. The article is restricted by print conventions like Rob Myer's recent CRIV article  soliciting vendor responses to print format switcheroos.

Gutenbergbible Moving Beyond the Gutenberg Revolution. This post is intended as an illustration that instead of confining CRIV attempts to solicit vendor answers to issues law librarians and institution buyers want to read to a publishing medium that produced the Gutenberg Bible updated only by PDF distribution, wouldn't the membership be better served by a CRIV-Unleashed blog?

An Example of What the Comment Function to a CRIV-Unleased Blog Could Do. Allow me to describe one example of product development input in action with some specificity. It's a positive story that demonstrates vendors can be responsive to law librarians and other users of new services they offer.

A former law school student of mine who now practices law in my county is blind. During law school we had all sorts of accessibility issues to address, from obtaining course-required textbooks to getting law profs to distribute JAW-friendly handouts and PowerPoints used in class to online legal research using WEXIS. Now that he is practicing law, we have another entirely different set of issues to address but that is not the topic of this post.

To Thomson Reuters credit, there was and is a text-based version of Westlaw with very strong support for learning how to use Westlaw for this student. Not so for Lexis at the time. This student graduated law school without any real exposure to Lexis because it was not sufficiently JAWS accessible.

When Lexis recently launched Lexis Advance for Solos and redesigned the graphic interface of Classic Lexis, both he and I wondered how accessible those services were. While up in Lexis HQ, I posed the question to the product development team for Lexis Advance and got a very positive response. Lexis gave us a login to Lexis Advance for Solos and I temporarily allowed my former student access to the redesigned version of Classic Lexis. After some searching performed and Q&As between my former student, now county law library user, and I about "do you 'see' with Jaws what I see with my eyes" we met with the product development team in Dayton for over two hours.

Both Classic Lexis post-makeover and Lexis Advance are very accessible. There are some different and minor issues but most of the issues we pointed out in the meeting with the Lexis Advance team where known (and were being worked on). There were a couple of issues about pop-ups in Lexis Advance that were not JAWS-friendly but the one thing not known by the team was the typical habits of JAWS-users, particularly with respect to how they use JAWS to navigate. Not a criticsm. One would not expect product developers to know this because they are not seeing-impaired. On this issue, LN's Lexis Advance product development team members took notes and were willing to make adjustments. The meeting was well worth the trip.

A CRIV-Unleashed Blog. I seriously doubt I am the only law librarian who has a story to tell about product development input to a vendor from the user population. Some stories would disclose successes, like this one. Others may disclose failed attempts. Some may demonstrate vendor interest and responsiveness, again, like this one. Some may not. Some may require further action on our part.

Every CIRV Sheet article, interview and FYI notice is blog post-able in a much more timely and publicly accessible manner that would also allow reader commenting along with follow-up posts between CRIV and vendors on topic in a timely manner. Isn't it long overdue for AALL to move beyond the Gutenberg Revolution and join the 21st century? [JH]

February 24, 2011 in Library Associations, Publishing Industry, Web Communications | Permalink | Comments (2)

The LISNews 10 Blogs To Read in 2011

Blake on LISNews "started the "10 Blogs To Read This Year" way back in 2006 to help highlight the wide range of people writing in the many different areas of librarianship. Each year we've attempted to point out a group of librarians whose writing helps increase our understanding of the profession and it's place in our rapidly changing world. Again this year we tried to choose 10 writers who cover very different aspects of our profession, 10 sites that inform, educate and maybe amuse."

And here is this year's list:

  1. All These Birds With Teeth
  2. Forgotten Bookmarks
  3. Hack Library School
  4. InkDroid
  5. The LSW Friendfeed Room
  6. Musings about librarianship
  7. Pegasus Librarian
  8. SearchReSearch
  9. Screwy Decimal
  10. The Undergraduate Science Librarian

Check out Blake's LISNews post for descriptions and links to each blog in this year's list of 10 blogs to read (as well as for links to prior annual lists). [JH]

February 24, 2011 in Web Communications | Permalink | Comments (0)

February 23, 2011

Legal Research Textbook Reviewers Wanted

The Research Instruction Committee of the RIPS-SIS is looking for persons interested in reviewing legal research texts. Details in the RIPS Law Librarian post. [JH]

February 23, 2011 in Legal Research Instruction | Permalink | Comments (0)