↓ Skip to Main Content

CSU Law Library Blog

Main Navigation

  • Home
  • About
  • Law Library

Google Wins! Two Lessons for Legal Researchers from Viacom v. YouTube

By jan.babbit@law.csuohio.edu Posted on June 24, 2010 Posted in National, Research Guides

The next time you ask yourself why all this fuss about legislative history, take a look at the significance of Congressional reports in determining legislative intent of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (17 U.S. C. 512) to the outcome of …

Google Wins! Two Lessons for Legal Researchers from Viacom v. YouTube Read more »

Share

Comparative Look at the Education of Non-Native Language Speaking Children

By a.burchfield@csuohio.edu Posted on June 17, 2010 Posted in International

The U.S. Law Library of Congress offers a helpful chart linking to documents on the education of non-native language speaking children. Information for England, the European Union, France, Israel, and Japan is provided.

Share

Call for Papers: Remedies

By a.burchfield@csuohio.edu Posted on June 16, 2010 Posted in Writing competitions, grants, calls for papers

A recent post to the Civil Procedure & Federal Courts Blog alerted me to a call for papers from the AALS Section on Remedies. The Section will host a program entitled “Rebirth of the Irreparable Injury Rule” during the 2011 …

Call for Papers: Remedies Read more »

Share

Earn Money/Get Help Publishing a Digital Casebook

By saltmeyer Posted on June 12, 2010 Posted in Apps/Technology, Faculty Teaching & Scholarship Tagged with CALI

CALI is  making a big push to find law profs to write casebooks for eLangdell. eLangdell is an initiative to publish law school casebooks that are easy to share and can adapt to any format, including digital. After their proposal is accepted, CALI will pay …

Earn Money/Get Help Publishing a Digital Casebook Read more »

Share

Law Journal Publication Agreements Article

By Laura Ray Posted on June 10, 2010 Posted in Faculty Teaching & Scholarship, Legal Writing and Citation

A recent Law Library Journal article reports that only a minority of law journals require authors to transfer copyright to the publication.  Though a third of law journals require an exclusive license, most of these licenses were temporary.  See Copyright …

Law Journal Publication Agreements Article Read more »

Share

Posts pagination

Previous 1 … 695 696 697 698 699 … 730 Next
© 2023 CSU Law Library | Cleveland State University
Copyright © 2025 CSU Law Library Blog | Powered by Responsive Theme
Secret Link