‘Long Lost Legislative History’

We often tell our students not to overlook law student notes in law journals…As affirmation of that point, I ran across a rather interesting little tidbit in the Journal of Air Law and Commerce.

The author, John T. Cocklin, writes:

“This article uncovers the long lost legislative history of 701(e) and reviews the history of 701(e) in the courts.  Previous courts and law review authors (save one) found no direct legislative history for the section.  Notable among these law review authors were attorneys working for the NTSB and its predecessor agenices….In 1952, however, a second-year law school student at the University of California named R. Bruce Hoffe discovered the legislative history of 701(e).  His article never landed on the citation trail and his research sat quietly on the pages of the California Law Review for fifty years.”

 

Cite: “National Transportation Safety Board Aircraft Accident Reports: The Long Lost Legislative History of Section 701(E)”
by John T. Cocklin
74 Journal of Air Law and Commerce 781 (2009)

Journal of Emerging Knowledge in Emerging Markets

New journal: “Journal of Emerging Knowledge in Emerging Markets.” Articles from Volume 1 are available full-text online:

http://www.icainstitute.org/ojs/index.php/working_papers/index

You are invited to submit your empirically based or conceptual works in progress related to the rise of emerging economies, in particular China and India, and their impact on global markets, global resources and geopolitics of the world. The following topics are of particular interest:

Agriculture and Food Sciences
Corporate Social Responsibility
Education
Emerging Markets
Energy
Environment & Conservation
Global Compliance and Global Transactions
Healthcare and Life Sciences
Information and Communication Technology
Innovation
Logistics & Transportation
Manufacturing
Media and Entertainment
Policy Analysis
Retail
Security
Strategic Sourcing
Trade & Finance

Law.gov: National Inventory of Legal Materials

Last week, Paul blogged about the Law.gov video from the first workshop held here at Stanford Law School on January 12th.   In his posting, Paul shared an op-ed from the New York Times entitled “A Nation of Do-It-Yourself Lawyers,” by California Chief Justice Ronald George and New Hampshire Chief Justice John T. Broderick Jr. that asks “how can we help those who are left to represent themselves in court?”

As a follow-up to that post, I want to share something else that Chief Justice Ronald M. George recently wrote.  ”Access to Justice in Times of Fiscal Crisis” appears in the Fall, 2009 issue of the Golden Gate University Law Review.   Chief Justice George writes about the ‘historic reforms’ to the California court system: ‘trial court funding, court unification and facilities transfers’ and how these have “enhanced access to justice and provided a greater degree of accountability to the public.”

However, there are still problems.  As Chief Justice George writes:

“Courts in California currently operate more than 70 different case-management systems with about 130 variations.  These systems do not connect with one another and do not provide information across court and county jurisdictions…

We cannot afford to operate in an electronic Tower of Babel.”

Even though, Chief Justice George was only talking about the California courts’ case management systems, a ‘Tower of Babel’ frustration exists for anyone attempting to do legal research today.    Much of the legal research materials that we would consider primary aren’t freely available.  What is free often carries the warning that it can’t be relied upon or isn’t official.  For every state, there are different vendor relationships when it comes to publishing the codes and in assertion of copyright over that material.

The concept behind Law.gov might help reduce some of the confusion.  Law.gov is “an effort to create a report documenting exactly what it would take to create a distributed registry and repository of all primary legal materials in the United States.”

For Law.gov to work, we need to create a national inventory of all primary legal materials, and then some.  This inventory will be a packing list of sorts, describing, detailing, and cataloging where one can find the laws of our Federal and State systems.  And, not just the materials that we would define as ‘primary’ — we would want to note the availability of those items that are created as part of that process (from briefs and filings of attorneys to congressional testimony, etc).

How do we create the inventory?  To create this list, we will need the collaboration of librarians and researchers across the country.  From the creation of the categories that we would use for collecting the information to the data entry itself, this will take a lot (a lot) of volunteer effort from all sorts of folks.

To test the process, we should start small and local.  Because we were fortunate enough to have NOCALL folks at the first Law.gov workshop, it will begin here.  NOCALL now has a task force dedicated to creating a micro-inventory, focusing on California materials.  We are using a shared spreadsheet and just beginning to fill out rows and columns.

Questions abound:  should we include this format, what about copyright assertions, etc.    For now, the approach is simple: if we can start populating the spreadsheet, we can hammer out the problems later.  In fact, that is exactly the point of the series of Law.gov workshops, co-hosted by Carl Malamud and a number of law schools throughout the country.   The issues that come up in the creation of an inventory should be shared and discussed.

Perhaps, you are intrigued by this and want to know more, do more.  For starters, watch the video from the Stanford workshop.  And, try to attend one of the Law.gov workshops this year.  If you want to help on the inventory, please let us know.   What NOCALL is starting can and should be replicated in other areas.

Bloomberg Law, LexisNexis, Westlaw — New, Improved

From today’s New York Times:

The New York Times, Monday, January 25, 2010, p. B5

Technology

Legal Sites Plan Revamps As Rivals Undercut Price

By Ashlee Vance

Westlaw and LexisNexis, the dominant services in the market for computerized legal research, will undergo sweeping changes in a bid to make it easier and faster for lawyers to find the documents they need.

And in the February issue of the ABA Journal:

Legal Technology
Exclusive: Inside the New Westlaw, Lexis & Bloomberg Platforms
By Jill Schachner Chanen

After decades of Westlaw and Lexis rolling out incremental improvements, real innovation has become the watchword in online legal research. At stake: billions in revenue and a big piece of your computer desktop.

The ABA Journal article quotes yours truly.   A point I was trying to make, but it didn’t make the article, was how useful I find added features such as Westlaw’s ResultsPlus and Lexis’s Related Content.  These features steer students to what could be very valuable secondary source material that they wouldn’t necessarily think to search since many have the inclination to jump feet first into the case law databases.

Law.gov video presentation now online!

In a January 2, 2010 op-ed in the New York Times entitled “A Nation of Do-It-Yourself Lawyers,” California Chief Justice Ronald George and New Hampshire Chief Justice John T. Broderick Jr. asked “how can we help those who are left to represent themselves in court?”

One thing we can do is make the law of the nation freely available.  Today much of the law remains behind a pay wall, often a very expensive pay wall.

There have been efforts to liberate the law — five guys at Cornell (Cornell’s Legal Information Institute), three guys at Google (Google Scholar legal opinions), and others.  The federal government has made strides too, eCFR remains a model of free, updated legal content, but as the first paragraph explains on the eCFR website disclaims, “It is not an official legal edition of the CFR.”  State government efforts are as varied as the 50 states and District of Columbia.

So what to do?

Law.gov is a campaign to identify what a national law registry should include, and to make recommendations to the policy makers on how to structure a repository of all primary legal materials (and maybe more) at all levels of government.

The Stanford Law Library hosted a Law.gov kickoff event on January 12, 2010 and the day’s events included a terrific panel discussion with Carl Malamud, Anurag Acharya (Google Scholar lead engineer) and law professor Jonathan Zittrain, moderated by Stanford Law School lecturer Roberta Morris.  We now have a streaming video link from this discussion and it’s definitely worth viewing:

http://www.law.stanford.edu/calendar/details/3717/#related_media

2009 Directory of Indian Law Firms

The India Business Law Journal has posted a profile of over 30 Indian law firms. The Directory also includes a brief article on the state of the legal profession in India.

2009 Directory of Indian Law Firms 

http://www.indilaw.com/pdfs/2009%20Directory%20of%20Indian%20Law%20Firms.pdf

New Congressional Research Report on Lobbying the Executive Branch

The Congressional Research Service (CRS) came out in December 2009 with a new and helpful report:

Lobbying the Executive Branch: Current Practices and Options for Change

The report addresses, among other things:

Hat tip to Law Librarian Blog.

Cross-posted in Law Library Blog.

Colombian Legal Journals

The University of Medellín’s Eduardo Fernández Botero Library has posted a list of over a hundred Colombian legal journals. Journal titles and publishing institutions are listed. Unfortunately, no links are provided. 

Colombian Legal Journals

http://www.udem.edu.co/UDEM/Servicios/Biblioteca/revDerecho.htm

Glossary of Islamic Financial Terms

Yasaar, a consulting company of Shari’a compliance scholars, maintains an online glossary of Islamic financial terms. Brief definitions in English are provided, although the Arabic spellings of the terms are missing. The Yasaar site also has publications and PowerPoint presentations related to Islamic Finance on their Web site.

Glossary of Islamic Financial Terms

http://www.yasaar.org/glossary.htm