Scarecrow Press
Pages: 416
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-8108-5189-4 • Hardback • December 2006 • $135.00 • (£104.00)
978-1-4616-7310-1 • eBook • December 2006 • $128.00 • (£98.00)
Bryan M. Carson is an associate professor and Coordinator of Reference and Instructional Services at Western Kentucky University and is a member of the bar in Ohio and Kentucky. He has published extensively on law as applied to libraries, and since 1999 has edited a very popular column, "Legally Speaking," in Against the Grain.
Part 1 Acknowledgments
Chapter 2 1. Libraries and the U.S. Legal System
Chapter 3 2. Contracts: A Meeting of the Minds
Chapter 4 3. Copyright and Patent Law
Chapter 5 4. Fair Use and Intellectual Property Rights: The Basics of Using Information Legally
Chapter 6 5. Copyright and Education
Chapter 7 6. Trademark and Trade Secret Law
Chapter 8 7. Licensing of Intellectual Property
Chapter 9 8. Information Malpractice, Professionalism, and the Unauthorized Practice of Law and Medicine
Chapter 10 9. Search Warrants, Investigations, Library Records, and Privacy
Chapter 11 10. Internet Use Policies and the Filtering Debate
Chapter 12 11. Employment and Workplace Law
Chapter 13 12. Forming a Nonprofit Organization
Part 14 Notes
Part 15 Index
Part 16 About the Author
...a readable, enlightening addition to a librarian's professional development bookshelf....
— Legal Information Alert, March 2007
Comprehensive, easy to understand, and up-to-date, this title is recommended....
— Catholic Library World, Vol. 78, No. 1, September 2007
This is a work that every librarian and archivist should read; every library and archive should add it to the reference collection. Essential.
— Choice Reviews, Vol. 44, No. 11 (July 2007)
A good reference on law...Carson is clear and concise in his analysis....Obviously, this is a valuable book and website for archivists and librarians managing programs and holdings in our litigious age.
— Records and Information Management Report
This book should be required reading for anyone who works with copyright, intellectual access, patent law, fair use, or contracts. It is a simple (as simple as one can get regarding these laws), easy-to-use reference book, written for laymen, dealing with the complexities and intricacies of many laws related to libraries and archives. The author is well-known to librarians, having published the column 'Legally Speaking' in Against the Grain since 1999. Almost everything and anything dealing with libraries and the law is detailed here.
— Public Services Quarterly
Carson is well qualified to write this book. He is educated as a librarian and as a lawyer....He demonstrates throughout the book a superb understanding that his readers are in need of legal information, but are not likely to have much or any formal training in the law.
— Kenneth D. Crews, Columbia University