General Resources
Zotero group
Tweets from Future of Law Libraries at Harvard Law School, The Future of Law Libraries: The Future Is Now, Harvard Law School, June 16, 2011
Tweets from Future of Law Libraries at Harvard Law School, The Future of Law Libraries: The Future Is Now, Harvard Law School, June 16, 2011
Author Rights and Journal Policies
Open Access Policies in Law Schools
ROARMAP
Copyright and the Harvard Open Access Mandate
Paper Tigers: Rethinking the Relationship between Copyright and Scholarly Publishing
Copyright and the Harvard Open Access Mandate
Paper Tigers: Rethinking the Relationship between Copyright and Scholarly Publishing
Repository Platforms
Data
IQSS Dataverse Network
Empirical Research Support at U.S. Law Schools and Libraries (selected)*
* This information was collected by S. Blair Kauffman, Yale Law School. Library directors and others responded to his web queries, posted to the Law Library Directors’ listserv (Lawlibdir), in mid-January and early April 2013.
American Law School – Librarian Amy Taylor provides services via the law library Columbia Law School – Empirical support is available via the university, and individual faculty hire graduate research assistants for their empirical projects.
Case Western Reserve University - Librarian Lisa Peters provides services via the law library.
Cornell Law School – Empirical legal faculty, including Ted Eisenberg, provide support for empirical work at the law school and throughout the legal academy.
Duke/UNC Law School – Empirical Research Analyst Guangya (Ya) Liu provides services via the law library
Emory Law School - Law Library actively coordinates/collaborates with the Business Library to provide that service.
Fordham Law School – Librarian Alissa Black-Dorward provides services via the law library.
Georgetown – The Center for the Study of the Legal Profession provides support to the law school. The Center is separately funded from the library and maintains a staff trained in empirical research and statistical analysis. Some librarians are undergoing fairly extensive empirical legal research training.
Harvard Law School – Statistician Travis Coan and Empirical Research Fellow Constantine Boussalis provide services via the law library.
UCLA Law School – The Empirical Research Group, led by professor Joseph W. Doherty,provides support to the law school, including RA training. The ERG is located outside the library structure, but works closely with reference librarians.
University of Chicago Law School – Services are provided via the law school’s Institute for Law & Economics, which employs several graduate students.
University of Michigan Law School – The law school has arranged for a professor of Economics and Public Policy to provide empirical support to the law school. Faculty Research Service also provides some empirical research support.
University of North Carolina/Duke Law School – Empirical Research Analyst Guangya (Ya) Liu provides services via the law library.
Vanderbilt Law School – Librarian Jason Sowards provides services via the law library.
Virginia Law School – Librarian Jon Ashley provides services via the law library.
Washington & Lee – Librarian Stephanie Miller provides services via the law library.
Yale – Empirical Research Librarian Sarah Ryan provides services via the law library.
Research Data Management eResources and Publications*
*Credit is due to Michelle Hudson, Science and Social Science Data Librarian at the Yale Center for Science and Social Science Information, who disseminated many of these resources via the Data & eScience Group at Yale University.
Carlson, Jake. “Demystifying the data interview: Developing a foundation for reference librarians to talk with researchers about their data.” Reference Services Review 40, no. 1 (2012): 7-23.
Carlson, Jacob, Michael Fosmire, C. C. Miller, and Megan Sapp Nelson. “Determining data information literacy needs: A study of students and research faculty.” portal: Libraries and the Academy 11, no. 2 (2011): 629-657.
Choudhury, G. Sayeed. “Case study in data curation at Johns Hopkins University.” Library Trends 57, no. 2 (2008): 211-220.
Choudury, Sayeed. “Data curation: An ecological perspective.” College & Research Libraries News 71, no. 4 (2010): 194-196.
Crosas, Merce. “The Dataverse Network®: An open-source application for sharing, discovering and preserving data.” D-Lib Magazine 17, no. 1 (2011).
Digital Curation Centre (DCC). Resources for Digital Curators. Retrieved April 2, 2013 from: http://www.dcc.ac.uk/resources
Executive Office of the President: Office of Science and Technology Policy. Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies: Increasing Access to the Results of Federally Funded Scientific Research. Retrieved April 2, 2013 from: http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/microsites/ostp/ostp_public_access_memo_2013.pdf
Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR). Data Management. Retrieved April 2, 2013 from: httpDo-It-Yourself Research Data Management Training Kit for Librarians. Retrieved April 2, 2013 from: http://datalib.edina.ac.uk/mantra/libtraining.html
://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/datamanagement/index.jsp
King, Gary. “An introduction to the Dataverse Network as an infrastructure for data sharing.” Sociological Methods & Research 36, no. 2 (2007): 173-199.
Mayernik, Matthew, G. Sayeed Choudhury, Tim DiLauro, Elliot Metsger, Barbara Pralle, Mike Rippin, and Ruth Duerr. “The Data Conservancy Instance: Infrastructure and Organizational Services for Research Data Curation.” D-Lib Magazine 18, no. 9 (2012).
Monastersky, Richard. “Publishing frontiers: The library reboot.” Nature 495, no. 7442 (2013).
Steele, Julie, and Noah Iliinsky. Beautiful Visualization. Sebastopol, CA: O’Reilly Media (2010).
Tenopir, Carol, Suzie Allard, Kimberly L. Douglass, Arsev Umur Aydinoglu, Lei Wu, Eleanor Read, Maribeth Manoff, and Mike Frame. “Data sharing by scientists: Practices and perceptions.” PLoS One 6, no. 6 (2011).
University of Chicago. Research Data Management Implementations Workshop: Submitted Experience and Position Papers. Retrieved April 2, 2013 from: https://rdmi.uchicago.edu/page/submitted-experience-and-position-papers
University of Edinburgh, U.K. Data Archive, and Purdue University Libraries.
Empirical Research Support at U.S. Law Schools and Libraries (selected)*
* This information was collected by S. Blair Kauffman, Yale Law School. Library directors and others responded to his web queries, posted to the Law Library Directors’ listserv (Lawlibdir), in mid-January and early April 2013.
American Law School – Librarian Amy Taylor provides services via the law library Columbia Law School – Empirical support is available via the university, and individual faculty hire graduate research assistants for their empirical projects.
Case Western Reserve University - Librarian Lisa Peters provides services via the law library.
Cornell Law School – Empirical legal faculty, including Ted Eisenberg, provide support for empirical work at the law school and throughout the legal academy.
Duke/UNC Law School – Empirical Research Analyst Guangya (Ya) Liu provides services via the law library
Emory Law School - Law Library actively coordinates/collaborates with the Business Library to provide that service.
Fordham Law School – Librarian Alissa Black-Dorward provides services via the law library.
Georgetown – The Center for the Study of the Legal Profession provides support to the law school. The Center is separately funded from the library and maintains a staff trained in empirical research and statistical analysis. Some librarians are undergoing fairly extensive empirical legal research training.
Harvard Law School – Statistician Travis Coan and Empirical Research Fellow Constantine Boussalis provide services via the law library.
UCLA Law School – The Empirical Research Group, led by professor Joseph W. Doherty,provides support to the law school, including RA training. The ERG is located outside the library structure, but works closely with reference librarians.
University of Chicago Law School – Services are provided via the law school’s Institute for Law & Economics, which employs several graduate students.
University of Michigan Law School – The law school has arranged for a professor of Economics and Public Policy to provide empirical support to the law school. Faculty Research Service also provides some empirical research support.
University of North Carolina/Duke Law School – Empirical Research Analyst Guangya (Ya) Liu provides services via the law library.
Vanderbilt Law School – Librarian Jason Sowards provides services via the law library.
Virginia Law School – Librarian Jon Ashley provides services via the law library.
Washington & Lee – Librarian Stephanie Miller provides services via the law library.
Yale – Empirical Research Librarian Sarah Ryan provides services via the law library.
Research Data Management eResources and Publications*
*Credit is due to Michelle Hudson, Science and Social Science Data Librarian at the Yale Center for Science and Social Science Information, who disseminated many of these resources via the Data & eScience Group at Yale University.
Carlson, Jake. “Demystifying the data interview: Developing a foundation for reference librarians to talk with researchers about their data.” Reference Services Review 40, no. 1 (2012): 7-23.
Carlson, Jacob, Michael Fosmire, C. C. Miller, and Megan Sapp Nelson. “Determining data information literacy needs: A study of students and research faculty.” portal: Libraries and the Academy 11, no. 2 (2011): 629-657.
Choudhury, G. Sayeed. “Case study in data curation at Johns Hopkins University.” Library Trends 57, no. 2 (2008): 211-220.
Choudury, Sayeed. “Data curation: An ecological perspective.” College & Research Libraries News 71, no. 4 (2010): 194-196.
Crosas, Merce. “The Dataverse Network®: An open-source application for sharing, discovering and preserving data.” D-Lib Magazine 17, no. 1 (2011).
Digital Curation Centre (DCC). Resources for Digital Curators. Retrieved April 2, 2013 from: http://www.dcc.ac.uk/resources
Executive Office of the President: Office of Science and Technology Policy. Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies: Increasing Access to the Results of Federally Funded Scientific Research. Retrieved April 2, 2013 from: http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/microsites/ostp/ostp_public_access_memo_2013.pdf
Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR). Data Management. Retrieved April 2, 2013 from: httpDo-It-Yourself Research Data Management Training Kit for Librarians. Retrieved April 2, 2013 from: http://datalib.edina.ac.uk/mantra/libtraining.html
://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/datamanagement/index.jsp
King, Gary. “An introduction to the Dataverse Network as an infrastructure for data sharing.” Sociological Methods & Research 36, no. 2 (2007): 173-199.
Mayernik, Matthew, G. Sayeed Choudhury, Tim DiLauro, Elliot Metsger, Barbara Pralle, Mike Rippin, and Ruth Duerr. “The Data Conservancy Instance: Infrastructure and Organizational Services for Research Data Curation.” D-Lib Magazine 18, no. 9 (2012).
Monastersky, Richard. “Publishing frontiers: The library reboot.” Nature 495, no. 7442 (2013).
Steele, Julie, and Noah Iliinsky. Beautiful Visualization. Sebastopol, CA: O’Reilly Media (2010).
Tenopir, Carol, Suzie Allard, Kimberly L. Douglass, Arsev Umur Aydinoglu, Lei Wu, Eleanor Read, Maribeth Manoff, and Mike Frame. “Data sharing by scientists: Practices and perceptions.” PLoS One 6, no. 6 (2011).
University of Chicago. Research Data Management Implementations Workshop: Submitted Experience and Position Papers. Retrieved April 2, 2013 from: https://rdmi.uchicago.edu/page/submitted-experience-and-position-papers
University of Edinburgh, U.K. Data Archive, and Purdue University Libraries.
Web Archiving
Metrics
Altmetrics
ImpactStory (nee Total Impact)
Ross E. Davies, Law Review Circulation 2011: More Change, More Same
ImpactStory (nee Total Impact)
Ross E. Davies, Law Review Circulation 2011: More Change, More Same