Small ideas on legal practice, research and technology

Archive for ‘Research & Writing’

Successor and Predecessor Tribunal Names

Back in the summer an Alberta bill was which caused the name of a decision making tribunal to change. For legal researchers, the important task is knowing what to look for regarding content, and often this means that you have to know who you are looking for.

This tribunal, now called the Alberta Energy Regulator has an excellent website with good methods for accessing their current and previous decisions. Decisions from this tribunal are also available with great coverage in LexisNexis Quicklaw.

Hat Tip for today’s tip goes to Quicklaw, especially for sending out content announcements like this one …

Posted in: Research & Writing

Translation Help With TERMIUM Plus

Today’s Tip is about our languages thanks to a tweet from Susannah Tredwell, Manager of Library Service at Davis LLP in Vancouver.

Susannah shared news about TERMIUM Plus (R), the Canadian Government’s terminology and linguistic data bank.

What is in this data bank? According to the site:

  • Almost 4 million English and French terms;
  • More than 18,000 Portuguese terms;
  • More than 200,000 Spanish terms;
  • More than 4,000 monthly updates;
  • Accurate, specialized and up-to-date terminology;
  • The Government of Canada´s standardization tool;
  • 17 diverse and user-friendly writing tools.

A quadralingual databank gives the precise English, French or Spanish or Portuguese equivalent …

Posted in: Research & Writing

Policies

It is pretty easy to remember to look for legislation that applies to an issue. In the legal research card game legislation trumps case law unless an argument can be made that the legislation is wrong or should in turn be trumped by some other legislation – the Charter is a Joker.

Some legal research arguments require a searcher to be aware of policies.  All kinds of policy references appear in judicial decisions including this reference to Peter Hogg at para 107 of Canada (Attorney General) v. Bedford, 2013 SCC 72 (CanLII).

The doctrines of overbreadth, disproportionality

Posted in: Research & Writing

Parliamentary Documents

Researching federal legislation can be fascinating particularly historical legislation. The Canadian spirit of the times can gleaned from the content and context of our legislation. As frustrated ambivalent challenged as this might make you feel when reading the current debates, thankfully available on the wonderful LEGISinfo site, looking at debates from the past is both interesting and potentially useful for legal research.

This fall, the Library of Parliament, in collaboration with Canadiana.org, launched its Historical Debates of the Parliament of Canada digital portal.

The portal makes the debates of the House of Commons and the Senate for the …

Posted in: Research & Writing

Attend Vendor Delivered Training

The people who know most about what features a product has are the people who made it.

Despite our constant practice using the information tools that we subscribe to and use, the library team members at my firm take opportunities to attend training sessions offered by our vendor and industry partners.  Whether it is a YouTube video, a webinar, a demo at a conference, or a visit to an exhibit hall booth, there is always something new to take in.

Today’s Tip applies to research tools, but equally to any software. Hat Tip to my document management provider, Worldox, …

Posted in: Research & Writing

Finding Previous URLs

Today’s Tip is a story: I was asked to find what a particular web-available document would have read in the early 2000s.  This is a pretty typical request for a law librarian. The general strategy:

  • Is the current version on a website? (yes)
  • Is the point in time version archived on that site? (no)
  • Plug the site into Internet Archive and locate.

Which works unless the domain for the website has changed.  If it has, where do you find the previous website address?  Here are a few tips:

  • If it is a business or organization that publishes something, look in
Posted in: Research & Writing

CourtListener – Access to U.S. Decisions

Thanks to an intriguing post at Bob Ambrogi’s LawSites blog today’s tip is to check out CourtListener for access to US decisions.

CourtListener is a core project of the Free Law Project, a non-profit with the lofty and laudable goals of providing free, public, and permanent access to primary legal materials and to develop, implement, and provide public access to technologies useful for legal research (among other things),

CourtListener has a clean, easy interface, clear messaging on coverage, and the ability to filter by percedential decisions, which they have over 2.2 million of.  Check it out.

CourtListener has created …

Posted in: Research & Writing

Find the Slide Deck

I gave a presentation today to the CBA Alberta Branch Research Lawyers South section. The slide deck is available on my LinkedIn profile. Posting the slide deck reminded me that interesting bits of information are available in slide decks posted all over the web.

For a slide deck starting point, check out professional associations and organizations past conferences.  Try company websites and blogs, lawblogs.ca is a good place to start for firms. SlideShare is a social platform specifically for sharing and searching presentation information.

Don’t believe me that legal people share their slides? Check out this recent post from …

Posted in: Research & Writing

Contact Us

Through opportunities presented by the Canadian Association of Law Libraries and through my firm, I was able to attend the American Association of Law Libraries conference this year.  I learned some things and met a bunch of great folks, including Sarah Mauldin, Director of Library Services at Smith, Gambrell & Russell LLP who inspired this post.

I have talked about “Phone a Friend” in past tips, more than once.  While I haven’t specified reaching out to contacts in other jurisdictions, it is worth a research tip mention.

You can find excellent contacts, and make friends …

Posted in: Research & Writing

When You Can’t Find a Textbook

Research issues can be very specific – either in the time period for information or in the minutia of the topic. For those questions, the commentary material near to hand may not have your answers. Today’s tip shares some approaches.

  • Look at reissues or recently released encyclopedias (the CED, Halsbury’s Laws of Canada)
  • Look for legal news articles (Lawyer’s Weekly, Canadian Lawyer, Law Times)
  • Look at bar association or law society newsletters (CBA National)
  • Look at law blogs (lawblogs.ca)
  • Look at law journals and topical journal publications (I use the Index to Canadian Legal Literature first and
Posted in: Research & Writing