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Law Library's mission is to provide law faculty and students with information
access and research support in an instructional learning environment accredited
by the ABA and AALS. In furtherance of this mission, the Law Library acts as a
repository for selected primary and secondary legal source materials, a gateway
to electronic information, a participant in resource-sharing networks, and as
a depository for selected federal government documents. The following policies
have been formulated pursuant to the Faculty 2006 Self-Study Goal that the library
continue to develop and transition to a digital library. I. Policies
A. Collection Development & Licensed Information Access Policy. Our collection
development and licensed information access policy is limited in scope to licensing
and/or acquiring American and public international primary and authoritative secondary
legal materials which directly support the present and anticipated curriculum,
as well as the basic research, instructional and writing needs of our law faculty
and students. 1. Factors in selecting print format include:
a. Continuing need to provide research instruction in print materials b. Desire
to possess and retain the written record of the development of American and public
international law c. Ease of use by faculty and students d. Faculty &
student dislike of microforms and compact discs (CDs) e. Lack of graphics
and tables in some online databases f. Limited shelf life of microforms and
CDs g. Longevity of acid-free paper h. Problems inherent with CDs, including
updating, network compatibility and user-friendly searching i. Ready availability
of print for heavily used materials j. Risk of electronic database disappearance/content
removal k. Unavailability in digital format
2. Factors
in selecting micro-formats (fiche & film) include: a. Necessity
to provide access to little used research materials b. Shelf space c.
Unavailability in print or online format
3. Factors in selecting
audio and video formats include: a. Alternative learning methods
b. Instructional value of audio & visual learning aids
4. Factors in selecting digital format include: a. Access to
documents world-wide b. Access to interdisciplinary materials c. Availability
of free Federal & State government sites to public information d. Desire
to conserve shelf space e. Desire to reduce expense of duplicate materials
in multiple formats f. Desire to reduce labor-intensive technical processing
and maintenance of print materials, microforms and CDs g. Ease of use by faculty
and students h. Full-text searching i. Need to provide online research
instruction j. Publisher-provided electronic services such as individual email
notification of subject-matter current developments k. Rapid updating
l. Remote access m. Research medium of choice by students and law firms
n. Simultaneous access o. Wireless environment
B. Resource Sharing Policy. Our resource sharing network policy is to create and
participate in local, regional and national library networks that expand our knowledge
of and access to information through shared online catalogs, national bibliographic
databases and delivery systems. 1. Factors driving creation
of networks include: a. Availability of sophisticated library
software, powerful servers, and the internet b. Database pricing advantages
through consortia c. Demand for information d. Impossibility of information
self-sufficiency for any library
II.
Priorities A. Resource Allocation Priorities
1. In order to have funds available for new titles, annual print and online continuation
costs should be contained such that they do not exceed 90% of the total acquisitions
budget.
2. Provide access to major electronic databases.
3. Maintain
print access to primary and secondary authority for Oregon and Washington
4. Maintain print access to Federal primary authority 5. Provide access
to American and public international law journals 6. Acquire new titles
in accordance with our collection development priorities 7. Acquire audio
and video tapes only upon request 8. Reduce looseleaf services to the
minimum 9. Cancel less used print treatises which are available in electronic
format thorugh our subscription databases. 10. Implement less frequent
updating for selective treatise titles (every 3rd or 4th year) 11. Acquire
microforms only for retrospective materials of historical importance not available
in electronic format.
B. Resource sharing network priorities.
1. Participate in local and regional networks that provide access to inter-disciplinary
materials
2. Utilize national bibliographic databases for interlibrary
loan purposes 3. Link to online catalogs that may be used to identify
source materials 4. Participate in specific networks as follows: a.
Hatfield Library Consortium b. OCLC c. Orbis Cascade Alliance
C. Federal Depository priorities: 1. Provide citizens within
the 5th Congressional District with direct access to law related U. S. Government
documents
2. Provide mediated access to GPO websites
D. Electronic Priorities 1. Provide access to databases that
provide rapid updating and cite-checking of primary source materials 2.
Provide access to databases that provide access to relevant information not otherwise
available in the collection 3. Provide access to databases that provide
search capabilities of legal sources not possible in other formats 4.
Provide access to databases that provide a back-up to materials in the collection
5. Provide access to databases that significantly reduce research time
6. Provide access to databases that provide indexing and searching capabilities
for large print collections, both current and retrospective 7. Provide
access to databases that replace the need for continued collection of print/microform
materials not considered essential for possession under our Collection Development
policy (II. A.) 8. Subscribe to specific subject-matter databases that
support our curriculum. 9. Access to the following materials will be primarily
through online databases and web sites: a. Foreign law b.
State government information c. United Nations documents d. U. S. Government
documents (CIS Universe, GPO Access & Thomas) e. U. S. Supreme Court briefs,
1990 - (Westlaw) f. U. S. Supreme Court oral arguments, 1990 - (Westlaw)
10.
Provide I.P. access to specific licensed databases including: a.
BNA All b. CCH Health & Employment Law Network c. CCH Tax Research
Network d. Constitutions of the Countries of the World e. HeinOnline
f. Lawtel g. Lexis h. RIA Checkpoint i. UN Treaty Collection j.
Westlaw
11. Provide I.P. access to Journals including: a.
BE Press b. Blackwell c. Cambridge d. HeinOnline e. Oxford
f. Wolters Kluwer
12. Provide I.P. access to electronic periodical
indices including: a. Current Index to Legal Periodicals
b. Index to Foreign Legal Periodicals c. LegalTrac d. Wilson Web
E. Print, Microform & Video Priorities 1. Acquire U. S.
Federal and State primary authority (statutes, administrative regulations, court
opinions, and administrative decisions) as follows: a. Appellate
court decisions for Oregon and Washington b. Attorney General Opinions for
Oregon and Washington c. Administrative regulations in force for Oregon and
Washington d. Selected administrative decisions for Oregon e. Pacific
Reporter f. All federal statutes g. All federal court decisions
h. Federal regulations i. All treaties to which the U.S. is a party
2.
Acquire a limited number of print access materials (abstracts, citators, digests
and indices) that correspond to our Federal, Oregon and Washington primary materials.
3.
Acquire a retrospective and current English language law periodical collection
not available online that focuses primarily on American and public international
law. 4. Acquire current treatises in: a. Comparative
law b. Jurisprudence and the history of English and American law c. Public
international law d. Subject areas that support the civil rights of all peoples
and communities subject to discrimination e. Subject areas that support the
curriculum f. Subject areas of research concern to faculty
5.
Acquire retrospective treatises which have substantial research value in: a.
Core curriculum subject areas b. Constitutional law, international law, jurisprudence,
and the history of English and American Law (we have Primary Source Media, 19th
Century British and American Legal Treaties in microfiche for constitutional law,
international law, jurisprudence, legal history, and maritime law) c. Subject
areas of research concern to faculty
6. Acquire foreign codes
and treatises on a very selective basis, focusing primarily on support of foreign
study programs and European Union countries. 7. Acquire a variety of condensed
subject-matter review materials on a selected basis. 8. Acquire specific
materials as follows: a. ABA and AALS materials selected
from or included in their respective package plans. Selective ABA materials are
also available through the ABA website with Director's membership number and password.
b. American Law Institute (ALI) Archives 1923 to date on microfiche c. American
Law Reports (ALR's) - 1 copy d. Bar exam questions for AK, CA, OR and WA if
they are not available online. Other western states optional depending on availability.
e. California CLE materials are purchased on a limited basis f. Casebooks
used as classroom texts - 1 copy per class section for reserve g. Citators
- Citators are purchased on a limited basis:
(i) Federal (a)
Federal (b) U. S. Administrative (c) U. S.
(ii) Regional (a)
Pacific
(iii) State (a) OR (b) WA
h.
Concise Hornbook series (West). Selected titles i. Court rules - Court rules
are purchased on a limited basis: (i) Federal Court Rules
(ii) State Court Rules for AK, CA, HI, ID, OR, WA (iii) State Court Rules
when they are an integral, numbered volume(s) within that state's statutes.
j.
Digests - Digests are purchased on a limited basis: (i)
American Digest - discontinued, but retain (ii) Federal Courts (iii) Special
subject digests - e.g., UCC, FRD (iv) State digests for OR and WA
k.
Duplicate sets - the library will purchase duplicate sets of primary authority
materials not available online only where there is heavy student use. As regards
secondary authority: (i) Periodicals - second subscriptions
are provided for several local law reviews (placed in Faculty Study) (ii)
Faculty "Recommended materials" for students - with few exceptions (Hornbook
and Nutshell series, etc.) the library will not purchase multiple copies (iii)
Treatises - except as otherwise specified, multiple copies are not purchased.
l.
Examples and Explanations Series (Aspen). Selected titles. m. Federal documents
(i) Pre-1970. Rely on the Oregon State Library (ii) 1970-2001.
We own the CIS microfiche complete collection (iii) Post-2001. Rely primarily
on web access and the Federal Regional Depository and secondarily on our very
limited selections as a Selective Federal Depository.
n. Hornbook
series (West). Selected titles (1 copy retained permanently) o. Introduction
to the Law Series (Aspen). Selected titles. p. Legal Encyclopedias - legal
encyclopedias are purchased on a limited basis: (i) Am
Jur 2d (ii) CJS
q. Looseleaf services - due to prohibitive
cost and expanding availability of subject matter online, extensive care is taken
in selection. r. National Reporter System. Federal Units and Pacific. s.
Nutshell series (West). Selected titles. t. Oregon CLE materials (i)
Software will be purchased on a title-by-title basis for students and faculty
use only. The Bar does not permit duplication of software for patrons. (ii)
Standing order for 3 copies of each hardbound title
u. Oregon
Law Institute standing order. v. Oregon State Bar section newsletters (retain).
w. Practice-oriented handbooks (other than Oregon CLE handbooks) are not purchased
unless they are the only creditable source of information on a topic relevant
to our needs. x. Restatements - one copy (Restatements are available on Westlaw).
y. Software (i) Stand-alone software will be purchased
for student and faculty use only when it is available in a network version.
(ii) Software accompanying treatise material will be processed and shelved on
2-hour reserve (subject to license restrictions) (iii) A copyright notice
prescribed by the Library of Congress at 37 CFR 201 (1991) will be affixed to
software available for public use.
z. State Statautes. AK,
CA, HI, ID, HY, OR and WA. aa. Understanding Series (Lexis). Selected titles.
bb. United Nations Category V (Law) and ICJ materials. Use web access for other
UN documents. cc. U. S. Supreme Court Oral Arguments, 1980-1999/2000, microfiche.
Post 1999/2000, Westlaw dd. U. S. Supreme Court Records and Briefs, 1897-1991/1992,
microfiche. Post 1991/1992, Westlaw ee. Video recordings by request ff.
Voice recordings by request gg. Washington CLE materials are purchased on
a limited basis.
9. Acquire rare books, funds permitting, in
the area of international law. Due to the relative newness of international law,
it is still possible to acquire some titles, whereas the cost factor is prohibitive
for most other rare law books.
III. Procedures:
A. Binding 1. Binding shall be done by the Trappist Bindery.
2. Periodical shipments will be sent to the bindery once a month. 3.
Rebinding of treatises, old state reports, etc. will be done on a funds-available
basis. Coordinate with Head of Technical Services on treatise rebinding. 4.
New softbound treatise material will be designated for binding by the Director.
B. Gifts. Gifts of materials are accepted only on the basis that the Director
may utilize them for whatever purpose most advantageous to the library (add to
collection, exchange, sell, discard, etc.) The Director may offer to place gift
book plates in certain items. A gift register is maintained by the Law Library
Administrative Assistant. C. Retention 1. Bar Exams:
Retain the most recent five years. 2. Federal Register: The most recent
two years of the print Federal Register shall be made available on the shelves.
Pre-1980 available on microfilm. Post-1980 available on Westlaw and Lexis.
3. Tax Analysts Publications: a. Tax Notes - retain the most recent five
(5) years. Available on Lexis and on CD. b. Tax Notes International - retain
through 1992; thereafter retain only the most recent five (5) years. Available
on Lexis and on CD. 4. U.S. Government publications: Those received through
the Depository Library Program shall be retained for a minimum period of 5 years.
See 44 U.S.C. §1912. Subsequent disposal requires permission from our regional
depository (Portland State University Library). Superseded documents may be discarded
without permission upon receipt of a new edition or revision. See Ch. 4 of the
Instructions to Depository Libraries. 5. The following items shall be
labeled and shifted to the superseded location in the collection: a. Biographies
(i) American Bench (ii) Who's Who in American Law b. Directories (i)
AALL, AALS (ii) Earlier editions of Martindale-Hubbell for Oregon (the State
of Oregon Law Library retains full sets of superseded Martindale-Hubbell since
the 1970's) (iii) Earlier editions of Oregon and Washington Legal Directories
c. Oregon Administrative Rules (i) Old editions 6. The following
dated materials shall be retained in the collection: a.
Casebooks - prior editions after evaluation by Director or Reference Librarian
b. CFR (i) Title 3, Executive Orders (shall be cataloged)
(ii) Annual CFR Sections Affected (four quarterly pamphlets - bind) (retain on
shelf with current CFR)
c. Hornbooks - retain 1 copy of all
hornbook editions d. Looseleaf services (i) Retain
all transfer binders (i.e., unbound cases)
e. Oregon Revised
Statutes (i) Old editions and "Chapters Replaced"
f.
Treatises - prior editions after evaluation by Director or Reference Librarian.
Prior editions not retained may be made available to students
D. Selection 1. Responsibility a. The Library
Director shall be responsible for the final selection and de-selection of all
library materials and databases with advice from the library staff. b. Students,
faculty and library staff are encouraged to make recommendations.
2.
Sources a. Brochures and catalogs b. Classified List of
U.S. depository items c. Current Publications in Legal and Related Fields
(Hein) d. Green slip service (Hein) e. Library of Congress proof sheets
(Midwest - twice yearly) f. Midwest Selection Service (no subscription services)
g. Miscellaneous h. University of Michigan Law Review - book reviews i.
Used book lists (Lionel Epstein, Meyer Boswell, LoDo Law Books, etc.)
E. Vendors 1. Primary Jobbers (purchase direct if not sold
through the trade) a. Blackwell North America (in-print treatises,
primarily University imprints) b. Gaunt c. Hein d. Midwest
2.
Second-hand and out-of-print dealers a. Alibris b. ABE American
Book Exchange Bookfinder c. Epstein - Washington, DC d. Law Book Exchange
e. Meyer-Boswell - San Francisco f. Miscellaneous
3. Retail
sellers a. Amazon.com b. Barnes & Noble c. Miscellaneous
F. Withdrawal. The following items shall be removed from the library catalog,
stamped "withdrawn", and recycled or given away:
1. Casebooks - old editions (after evaluation by Director or Reference Librarian)
2. CFR (other than those listed in this document under III C.5.b)
3. Digests - replaced volumes 4. Directories - superseded (other than
those listed in this document under III C.4.b) 5. Encyclopedias - replaced
volumes 6. Form books - replaced volumes 7. Shepard's Citators
- replaced volumes 8. Statutes (other than Oregon) - replaced volumes
9. Treatises - replacement volumes
IV. Faculty
Study A. Objective - Provide a limited reference study area
consisting of the following materials: 1. Oregon A.G. Opinions,
Citator, Court Opinions, Court Rules, Digest, Law Schools' periodicals, Pleading
and Practice CLE, Session Laws and Statutes.
2. U.S. Law Week
B. Limiting Considerations 1. Annual funds for upkeep
2. Easy accessibility to the collections of the Law Library, Mark O. Hatfield
Library, Oregon State Library and State of Oregon Law Library 3. Faculty
office online access to databases. 4. Space
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