My grandfather’s tax returns

Saw this item in the May 5th Business Week (“Many Historic Returns,” p. 17):

“Ancestry.com . . . has now added an electronic version of U.S. income tax records from 1862 . . . through 1918.  The site, which paid the government $ 46,000 for the rights to digitize the data, displays a listing of annual incomes — for those making more than $600 — as well as inventories of taxable luxury items. . . . “

New book: Research methods for law

Another new book just arrived in the library today.  Its catalog record is pasted below.  The contributors are from China, the UK, and Australia, so the perspective is interesting. 

Title: Research methods for law / edited by Mike McConville and Wing Hong Chui.
Imprint: Edinburgh : Edinburgh University Press, c2007.
Physical Description: viii, 239 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Series: (Research methods for the arts and humanities)
Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents: ch. 1. Qualitative legal research / Ian Dobinson and Francis Johns — ch. 2. Quantative legal research /Wing Hong Chui — ch. 3. Doing ethnographic research: lessons from a case study / Satnam Choongh — ch. 4. Comparative legal scholarship / Geoffrey Wilson — ch. 5. Integrating theory and method in the comparative contextual analysis of trial process / Mark Findlay and Ralph Henman — ch. 6. Researching the landless movement in Brazil / George Meszaros — ch. 7. Non-empirical discovery in legal scholarship – choosing , researching and writing a traditional scholarly article / Michael Pendleton — ch. 8. Researching international law / Stephen Hall — ch. 9. Development of empirical techniques and theory / Mike McConville.
Subject (LC): Legal research.
Added author: McConville, Michael.
Added author: Chui, Wing Hong.
       

LAW CALL NUMBER                                 
1)K85 .R47 2007             

Open Access and Open Source as Complementary…

It would seem helpful to also keep in mind the complementary nature of the Open Access and Open Source movements. (I have just recently converted my laptop to Ubuntu (which can be translated as “humanity toward others”), an Open Source, Linux-based product aimed at “providing an up-to-date yet stable operating system for the average user and having a strong focus on usability and ease of installation.”)

-George Wilson

Top Five (5) Ways for Librarians to Contribute to Open Access (OA) Movement

From the UBC Academic Search – Google Scholar Blog:

Top Five (5) Ways for Librarians to Contribute to Open Access (OA) Movement

1) Increase your own knowledge of OA issues; visit Open Access News daily;
2) Support OA by developing ‘information kits’ in your library organization to raise general awareness of open access principles and practices;
3) Develop ‘self-archiving‘ process to increase records in local repositories;
4) Show your solidarity by featuring open access journals on your library website (thanks to John Willinsky for that idea); do displays; handouts; presentations etc.
5) Deposit papers and presentations into E-LIS – the open archive for librarians and information specialists, or other digital archive – PubMedCentral, for example.

Cease, Desist & Resist – Oregon’s Copyright Claim on the Oregon Revised Statutes

from onward.justia.com:

Last week, the State of Oregon Legislative Counsel Committee sent Justia a notice of copyright infringement and demand to cease and desist. In its letter, Dexter Johnson, the Legislative Counsel, asked us to remove a copy of the Oregon Revised Statutes stored on our servers (or pay a licensing fee) by April 30, 2008. The letter claimed copyright on many parts of the Oregon Revised Statutes:

[T]he Committee … claim[s] a copyright in the arrangement and subject-matter compilation of Oregon statutory law, the prefatory and explanatory notes, the leadlines and numbering for each statutory section, the tables the index and annotations and such other incidents as are work product of the Committee in the compilation and publication of Oregon law.

Now, the letter is more detailed than the copyright claim on the Oregon Revised Statutes website:

The Legislative Counsel Committee claims copyright protection in those parts of Oregon Revised Statutes that are legally subject to copyright protection.

My take after reading the above claim on their website was that the State of Oregon was claiming a copyright to the annotation section and not the code itself. Accordingly, our copy of the Oregon Revised Statutes did not include the annotations. Needless to say Oregon’s copyright claim on the code itself was a surprise (understatement).

As requested in the letter, I called Oregon’s Sean Brennan the same Friday and Sean explained their position, reinforced the copyright claims in Dexter Johnson’s letter and said he would get us some licensing information (which is $30,000 for 2 years). He also said that Oregon had been talking with other states about how to raise licensing revenue for their codes. That was somewhat disturbing, as we want states to open up their public laws and regulations.

After the call with Sean, I talked with and sent a copy of the letter to Carl Malamud, who being a former Oregon fire fighter, has a special affection for the state of Oregon. Carl checked out the site, and wrote some letters to Dexter Johnson seeking clarification of their copyright claims.

Thursday, we (Carl Malamud, Nolo’s Stephen Elias and I) had a pleasant and constructive conversation with Dexter Johnson and his team. The Oregon folks are going to think through some different options. If Oregon comes up with a solution that promotes free and open access to the laws, then we will likely avoid litigation. If not, then we will likely have to ask the courts to determine whether state governments can prohibit others from downloading, reproducing or distributing the laws. I hope that given Oregon’s public interest focus, the State will adopt an approach that promotes open access to laws instead of one that maximizes licensing fees. We should know more next week.

Some prominent legal bloggers have commented on Oregon’s copyright claims. See Professor Tim Armstrong’s post “Can States Copyright Their Statutes?” on Info/Law and William Patry’s post “Oregon goes wacka wacka huna kuna” on the The Patry Copyright Blog and Sam Bayard’s post “Oregon Claims Copyright in Its Statutes — Well, Sort Of” on the Citizen Media Law Project Blog. We agree that public policy demands that state laws remain in the public domain. To otherwise permit the State of Oregon or any other governmental body to restrict access to the laws that govern all of us would make a mockery of the legal doctrine that all persons have presumed knowledge of the law. Fortunately, many courts have rightfully declined to recognize such copyright claims asserted by states and municipalities.

Peace,

Tim

 

About our blog

We’ve taught Advanced Legal Research at Stanford Law School since the fall of 2005.  And, it has been a tremendous experience.  This blog provides us with a space where we can share a bit of what we’ve learned.  We also hope to have our students and fellow librarians contribute to this space.