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General News

New on HeinOnline – State Statutes: A Historical Archive

Hein has just announced the release of State Statutes: A Historical Archive in HeinOnline. This new collection includes more than 1,600 volumes and nearly 2,000,000 pages of historical, superseded state statutes and offers a valuable source of information for legal researchers and scholars to understand the thinking and conditions behind the creation of the historical […]

Legal writing… with style?

Today there is an interesting article on Slaw about the need for a greater degree of style in legal writing. Not in the stylistic sense of flair (although that would certainly be nice – there is a reason we still love to read Lord Denning), but rather in the formalistic sense, where the writing is […]

Go on a BibliOdyssey…

While having breakfast this morning, my eye fell upon a book that I had purchased a few years ago and has since been residing in the dusty chambers of my memory. It is titled BibliOdyssey: Archival Images from the Internet, and it is an interesting, contradictory item – it is a book of images from […]

Read me like a hurricane

Having had a recent question regarding the use of RSS feeds to keep abreast of legal news (particularly new cases in CanLII), it occurred to me that this would be a great idea for practical blog post (cue the proverbial “eureka!” lightbulb above my head). RSS (or “Rich Site Summary”), is essentially a summary of […]

Courtroom Movies in a nutshell

It’s safe to say that we’ve all seen many, many movies and television shows that represent the well-worn tropes of the courtroom drama (or comedy) – dramatic tension, the quest for the truth, the judge furiously banging his or her gavel, celebrations over the delivery of justice, and so on. They’ve become so ingrained into […]

Canon law

It’s been an odd few weeks in the realm of ancient traditions, what with the discovery of Richard III and now the first papal resignation in six hundred years (and the first voluntary one since the thirteenth century, when Celestine V stepped down in 1294). As of 8pm (2pm EST) on Thursday, the Pope will […]

Happy Valentine’s from the Law Library!

Call it kismet, but we have received a new book for our Special Collections that seems extremely appropriate for Valentine’s Day. Titled The Law In Postcards & Ephemera 1890-1962, it is, as the name would suggest, a collection of law-related postcards and ephemera that ranges from the racy to amusing to just plain cute. While many […]

Nature and Numbering of English Acts of Parliament

We’ve been weeding the collection of reference materials now integrated into the Library’s Core Collection. (Don’t worry, we’re not throwing anything out; we’re just moving many of the older or no-longer-topical materials to the stacks or into storage.) In the process, we’ve found some pretty arcane and interesting things. This is one of them. In […]

English law was adopted as Canadian law at Confederation, right?

Wrong.  Another simple question at the Reference Desk last  week.  But we all know English law was received into Canada at some point, don’t we? We may think we know that, but I didn’t have any idea just how complicated the answer to the question of what law was received and when until I went […]