Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. The law library circulation desk is staffed Monday – Thursday, 8am – 8pm, and Friday 8am – 5pm. Please visit our hours page for full details. You may contact the circulation desk by emailing lawcirc@cornell.edu or calling (607) 255-7236. Members of the law school community can also access the Law Library outside of these hours with their ...

  2. 10 de nov. de 2022 · LibGuides. Law School Library. Law Faculty Services: Open access and OER textbooks. URL: https://guides.library.cornell.edu/LawFacultyServices. Online author profiles. Current awareness. Open access and OER textbooks. Law journal submissions. Submit to SSRN here.

  3. Law Library. Open until 8pm - Full Hours / Home. About. Use the Library. Resources. Student Services. Faculty Services. Resources. Cornell Law Library provides a variety of resources, both in print and online. Our navigation menu provides access to the online catalog and to the many databases available to the Cornell community.

  4. 2 de mai. de 2024 · Fastcase is a comprehensive, searchable legal database that provides access to statutes, cases, regulations, constitutions, and court rules from the federal government and all 50 states. Fastcase also now has docket content available through an integration with Docket Alarm as a part of Cornell's subscription.

  5. Cornell University Library. All Law School buildings including the library are currently accessible only to members of the Law community via Cornell ID card swipe access. Non-law patrons who wish to use the library must email lawcirc@cornell.edu at least 24 hours in advance to schedule an appointment.

  6. 26 de out. de 2021 · Spotlight on Free: Caselaw Access Project. Back in 2015, Harvard Law School announced the launch of the Caselaw Access Project (CAP), a project of its Library Innovation Lab . This is a collection of almost seven million cases covering about 360 years of American judicial opinions.

  7. The first three goals are the basic building blocks necessary to achieve meaningful open-access to the law. As Professor Martin of Cornell Law and others have chronicled, the open-access community has converged around these goals in recent years, and several states (such as Oklahoma) have successfully implemented them with very positive results.