Scarecrow Press
Pages: 532
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-0-8108-8805-0 • Hardback • November 2013 • $209.00 • (£162.00)
978-0-8108-8806-7 • Paperback • November 2013 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
978-0-8108-8807-4 • eBook • November 2013 • $108.00 • (£83.00)
Ellyssa Kroski is Director of Information Technology for the New York Law Institute, as well as a librarian, writer, educator, and international speaker. She is an adjunct faculty member at Pratt Institute and blogs at iLibrarian.
List of Figures
List of Tables
Foreword
Jean O’Grady
Preface
Ellyssa Kroski
Acknowledgments
Part I. Major Introductory Concepts
1 Law Librarianship 2.0
Jennifer Wertkin
2. Embedded Librarianship
Thomas J. Striepe and Mary Talley
3. Copyright in the Digital Age
Kyle K. Courtney
4. Open Access to Legal Scholarship
Cheryl Kelly Fischer and Vicki Steiner
5. User Services Analysis for Decision Making
Kim Clarke
6. Law Library Management
Camille Broussard, Ralph Monaco, and Gitelle Seer
Part II. Technologies
7. Digitization
Michelle M. Wu
8. E-books in Law Libraries
Ellyssa Kroski
9. Tablets and Mobile Device Management
William R. Mills
10. The Law Library Website
Andrew Plumb-Larrick
11. Web-Scale Discovery and Federated Search
Valeri Craigle
12. The Cloud
Roger Vicarius Skalbeck
13. Social Software
Marcia L. Dority Baker
Part III. Reference Services
14. Reference Services in a Law Library
Carol A. Watson
15. Introduction to Legal Research
Rhea Ballard-Thrower
16. Online Information Sources
Sarah K. C. Mauldin
17. Major Legal Databases and How to Search Them
Theodora Belniak
Part IV. Instruction
18. Library Instruction in the Information Age
Emily Janoski-Haehlen
19. Educational Technologies
Kim Clarke and Nadine R. Hoffman
Part V. Technical Services
20. Technical Services 2.0
Edward T. Hart
21. Collection Development
Molly (Mary) E. Brownfield
22. Electronic Resources Management and User Authentication
Catherine M. Monte
Part VI. Knowledge Management
23. Knowledge Management
Steven A. Lastres and Don MacLeod
24. The Law Library Intranet
Emily R. Florio and Michael J. Robak
Part VII. Marketing
25. Digital Age Marketing
Carol Ottolenghi
26. Competitive Intelligence
Jennifer Alexander and M. T. Hennessey
Part VIII. Professional Development and the Future
27. Professional Development
Holly M. Riccio
28. The Future of Law Librarianship
Scott D. Bailey and Julie Graves Krishnaswami
List of Contributing Authors
Editorial Board List
This title is an invaluable addition to the literature on law librarianship. As a professor of library and information science, Law Librarianship in the Digital Age will be a timely resource for students studying the issues and field of law librarianship. This is a valuable textbook to introduce students to law libraries and legal information management issues.
It gives a current analysis of the new information world and access to resources that users expect in their law library collections. The chapters provide an in-depth resource to the evolving challenges of the legal information profession including copyright, digital resources, databases, and the internet.
— Yvonne J. Chandler, Associate Professor and Director, Legal Information Program, University of North Texas College of Information
This book covers the broad sweep of a law librarian's role in the 21st century, addressing everything from the basics of legal research to high level decision-making by law library directors. Anyone working, or aspiring to work in a law library will find it a valuable resource.
— David A. Hollander, Law and Legal Studies Librarian, Princeton University Library
A must read for even the most experienced law librarians and a great addition to law librarianship literature. From open access to marketing, from tablets to competitive intelligence, there is something for everyone! Many of these chapters will make excellent reading for law librarianship courses and newly hired law librarians. Great job!
— Penny A. Hazelton, University of Washington
Law Librarianship in the Digital Age is the messiah of legal reference sources that has been long awaited. As the Executive Director of the New York Law Institute such a resource serves as a rubric of tools and techniques for managing a law library in the ever-expanding digital environment and as an Adjunct Assistant Professor at St John’s University Division of Library and Information Science it is a comprehensive manual for training students on how to manage a law library. “Law Libraries and the Cloud” to traditional “Technical Services 2.0”, this resource encompasses the breath and depth of law library management.
— Ralph Monaco, executive director, The New York Law Institute
Every law librarian, from the newest to the most senior, should read this book. The future of the profession is mapped out. The right people are writing about the right subject. Ignore it at your peril.
— Robert C. Berring, Jr., Walter Perry Johnson Professor of Law, Berkeley Law
I unequivocally endorse Law Librarianship in the Digital Age as it is an exceptional book that can be used as a textbook or supplementary text for an introductory Law Librarianship course. I would highly encourage students to make this book a permanent addition to their personal library.
— Renate L. Chancellor, Ph.D., Associate Professor, School of Information Studies, Syracuse University
Law Librarianship in the Digital Age pulls into one place introductory information on almost every topic about which a law firm librarian might be curious. ... I read through many other chapters in this book and found that the quality of editing throughout was superb, the bibliographies were thoughtfully constructed, the book was extremely timely, and the writing and organization were clear and helpful. The table of contents is thorough and serves as a handy checklist of our issues. . . . Well-written and comprehensive in coverage, the book is engaging for both the merely curious and those in need of step-by-step instructions for implementing a change in their library’s services or infrastructure. I highly recommend Law Librarianship in the Digital Age for any law librarian.
— American Association of Law Libraries
Written by the director of information technology for the New York Law Institute and the esteemed editor of Neal-Schuman’s Tech Set series, this book explores the issues that are most relevant to law librarians and that are at the forefront at law library conferences and events. The work is arranged into eight sections: Major Introductory Concepts (e.g., copyright in the digital age, law library management), Technologies (e.g., e-books in law libraries, the cloud), Reference Services (e.g., online information sources, major legal databases), Instruction (e.g., educational technologies), Technical Services (e.g., collection development, electronic resources management), Knowledge Management (e.g., the law library intranet), Marketing (e.g., digital age marketing, competitive intelligence), and Professional Development and the Future (e.g., associations and conferences, the future of law librarianship). Articles have been contributed by well-known law librarians from academic, government, and private law libraries. This book is a great overall handbook for anyone in the area of law librarianship. Its combination of scholarship and practical application make it a must-read for those in this industry.
— American Reference Books Annual
This book would clearly serve as an excellent text for a law librarianship course at the graduate school level. . . .The “further reading” references at the end of each chapter also support the value of this text in a graduate-level course. Beyond its value as a textbook, this book is an extremely important resource for any law librarian or library, adding tremendously to the body of law librarianship literature. Almost every law library is grappling with the wide-ranging issues addressed in the book. This is particularly true of the “Technologies” part of the book. Because every librarian or law library has potential in these areas, the book will be an important source of information for years to come.
— Law Library Journal
Law Librarianship in the Digital Age, compiled in 2013 and published in 2014, is, at the time of this writing, profoundly informative and current. The book is broad in scope and deep in content. The editor wisely chose to draw upon the wisdom of a number of knowledgeable law librarians. The result is a well-organized and well-sourced collection of essays that address all law library sectors, and the full range of law librarianship functions. Each chapter is not only current but also specific in its treatment of its topic. . . .I expect to keep this book on my "currently reading" list for the foreseeable future. Any law librarian thoughtful about the field might consider doing the same. Likewise, any modern course on law librarianship ought to look closely at this book for course adoption. Even general courses on aspects of law librarianship...can look to individual chapters. Certainly, it will alternate between my desk and my office bookshelf for some time to come.
— Canadian Law Library Review