The Conference on Legal Information: Scholarship and Teaching was attended by legal research professionals who gathered at the University of Colorado Law School in Boulder, Colorado on June 21-22, 2009, to discuss legal information scholarship and instruction.
Articles
The Relevance of Results Generated by Human Indexing and Computer Algorithms: A Study of West's Headnotes and Key Numbers and LexisNexis's Headnotes and Topics, Susan Nevelow Mart
Conference Proceedings
Boulder Statement on Legal Research Education, Legal Information Conference Attendees
Published
The Development of the Skills Curriculum in Law Schools: Lessons for Directors of Academic Law Libraries, Duncan Alford
Time to Blossom: An Inquiry into Bloom’s Taxonomy as a Hierarchy and Means for Teaching Legal Research Skills, Paul D. Callister
Way Beyond Legal Research: Understanding the Research Habits of Legal Scholars, Stephanie Davidson
First Amendment Limits on Library Collection Management, Anne Klinefelter
Research in the Wild: CALR and the Role of Informal Apprenticeship in Attorney Training, Judith Lihosit
Should We Care If the Case Digest Disappears?: A Retrospective Analysis and the Future of Legal Research Instruction, Sabrina Sondhi
Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill: A Lifeboat for Students and Law Schools, Sarah Valentine