Law librarians in any setting will find The Legal Bibliography useful in developing, purchasing, and using bibliographies in the future. Practicing law librarians and bibliographers share their views on the evolving state of the legal bibliography. The rapidly changing world of librarianship presents the information specialist with new methods of accessing bibliographic information. These changes also have implications for the future of the printed bibliography. Some librarians have abandoned--or do not even know of--titles that were once familiar to every member of a reference staff in favor of databases and CD-ROM products. Yet printed bibliographies, some of questionable value, continue to be published and compete for a place on the acquisitions list of many libraries. The law librarian is affected by this change as much, if not more, than other members of the profession. A researcher seeking legal information is usually concerned with the very latest references, bringing into question the adequacy of traditional printed compilations, or compilations produced simply by conducting a database search.Concentrating on their own areas of expertise, the contributors describe their use or creation of legal bibliographies and consider the ways in which technology might be changing their work. Some of the contributors emphasize classic bibliographies of the past, while others look at how the legal bibliography is used by the legal information specialist today and how the changing nature of access to bibliographic information affects their work. Still others speak to the future in discussing projected publications or ideas for alternative methods of creating and distributing bibliographies. The chapters describing some of the major bibliographies of the past will also be valuable. Several of the chapters will be helpful to authors of bibliographies--both legal and non-legal--who should be considering the methods used to produce and distribute their product. This volume will also be essential to those interested in the topic of bibliography for purposes of comparison with other areas of specialization. Ideal for law librarians, library school collections, and anyone interested in the topic of bibliography in general.
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978-0-86656-932-3 (9780866569323)
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Contents
Part I: Introduction
The Legal Bibliography: Tradition, Transitions, and Trends
Part II: Tradition
The New York University Law Library Catalogue Revisited
AALS Law Books Recommended: A 25-Year Retrospect
Legal Research Guides as Bibliographic Efforts
Part III: Transitions
The Use of Legal Bibliographies in the Modern Reference Room
The Role of Legal Bibliographies in Law Collection Development: An Overdue Debunking
Library School and Legal Bibliographies
Antiquarian Bookselling, Bibliography, and Rare Law Books
Legal Bibliographies and Shared Resources: The Evolution From Library Book Catalogs to Databases
Georgetown University's Developing Foreign Law Policy and Its Implications for Providing Reference Service
Part IV: Trends
Compiling an Historical Bibliography of American Law: Problems, Procedures, and Prospects
The Future of Legal Bibliography: The Role of Laserdiscs and Computers in Compiling and Distributing Bibliographies
End-User Access to Bibliographic Databases or Happy Trails: Public Users Ride High in the RLIN Saddle
Whither (Wither?) Paper Bibliographies?
Part V: Afterword
A Duty and a Joy: The Publication of Bibliographies by Librarians