Welcome 2020-2021 students

Welcome UVic law students! While our library buildings remain closed, we’re committed to supporting you this Fall 2020 semester.

We are excited to work with you to facilitate your learning and research in the new academic year.  Here are some of the library services that we are offering:

 Fall 2020 Services:

    • Borrowing items / scanning items (ReQuest service – see a demo of this in the video below)
      • Print items can be requested via the ReQuest service, checked out to students, and picked up outside McPherson library
      • Book chapters and journal articles not available online can be scanned and emailed to students
    • Laptop and equipment bookings (by emailing request@uvic.ca)
    • Bookable study space on campus (including in the Law Library and Bibliocafe at McPherson Library)
    • See Fall 2020 Services for detailed information and updates on all of the above.

 Research Help:

Law librarians are available Monday – Friday from 9am-5pm for help accessing resources and  doing research and citations – contact us at lawref@uvic.ca for assistance via email or Zoom.

 Videos:

Get started with a few quick videos from us:

    • Law Library virtual tour – for an introduction to us and access to key online online resources
    • Searching the library catalogue and Summon and using ReQuest

For full details on Law’s orientation for new students, visit UVic Law’s orientation for new students page.

Covid-19 legal resources

A list of resources to simplify and direct COVID-19 related legal research questions for students, faculty, and the UVic Community. For any research questions don’t be afraid to reach us at lawref@uvic.ca.

Contents:

Legal instruments

Repository of Canadian COVID-19 Emergency Orders:

    • Created by Intrepid blog/podcast, which is run by a group of lawyers and legal scholars from across Canada.
    • The resource includes information on legal instruments at the federal, provincial/territorial, and municipal levels, and from various First Nations.

Department of Justice | Legislative and other measures:

    • Created by the Government of Canada.
    • Resource includes federal legislation, charter statements, orders and regulations, and draft legislation proposals.

BC Laws | Regulations, OICs & MOs:

    • Created by the Government of British Columbia.
    • The resource includes a list of regulations, orders in council and ministerial orders created under the Emergency Program Act and other acts.

Pandemic Law Canada:

    • A collaborative website curated by legal information professionals (lawyers, paralegals, law librarians, law professors).
    • The resource includes links to COVID related legal resources federally and for each province/territory.

McCarthy Tetrault | Emergency measures tracker:

    • Law firm resource tracks emergency measures introduced by the federal and provincial/territorial governments.  They link to backgrounders, news releases and government websites for each emergency measure listed.

News & updates

Blogs and magazines

The Lawyer’s Daily:

    • Subscription required for daily Canadian legal news published by LexisNexis.
    • Freely available: LexisNexis has opened up access to regular updates about COVID-19. Coverage includes how the pandemic has impacted the legal industry and the practice of law, as well as the Canadian court system, federal agencies, industries, businesses and more.

Canadian Lawyers magazine | Covid-19 and the Courts:

    • Provides updates on court functions across Canada.

SLAW | law blog posts on COVID-19:

    • Blog posts by legal professionals on various aspects of how COVID-19 is affecting the legal profession.

Law firm newsletters

Canadian law firms are writing bulletins tracking changes and updates related to client business and industries, samples include but are not limited to:

Courts

Courts of BC | Supreme Court COVID update:

    • Notices and announcements from the BC Supreme Court related to their functions related to and during the pandemic.

Courts of BC | Court of Appeal COVID update:

      • Notices and announcements from the BC Court of Appeal related to their functions related to and during the pandemic.

Provincial Court of BC | COVID updates:

    • Notices and announcements from the Provincial Court of BC related to their functioning during the pandemic. The site includes FAQs and information on how to search for case law related to COVID-19.

Other

Library of Parliament | HillNotes:

    • The Library of Parliament’s research publications program introduced, in March 2020, a set of publications intended to provide parliamentarians with reliable, non-partisan and timely information in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Law Society of British Columbia | Covid Response:

    • FAQ on COVID-19 related legal issues aimed at legal professionals.

Databases & other research sources

Lexis Nexis:

    • Lexis Advance Quicklaw includes the Canada Coronavirus Law Guide (PDF) and updated content throughout the database.
    • Lexis Practice Advisor is a subscription database for practicing lawyers in Canada. The Coronavirus Document Kit is freely available and offers guidance related to COVID-19 and the law. The content includes guidance for employers on their obligations during a pandemic, key implications of COVID-19 for Canadian public companies, insight on commercial deals and terms, crisis communications, and more.

Thomson Reuters:

    • WestlawNextCanada’s Covid-19 legal materials include legislative watch, cases, commentary, and legal Issues and considerations arising from COVID-19 Pandemic by Practice Area.
    • Practical Law Canada is offering freely available webinars, news, and the Canada Coronavirus Toolkit which includes resources to assist on the legal and practical issues arising from the threat of business disruption.

CLEBC Online:

    • Small selection of content aimed at lawyers practicing during COVID-19.

IntelliConnect:

    • Consistently updated COVID-19 news and analysis for tax & accounting professionals.

Canadian Bar Association:

Legal resources for the public

Clicklaw WikiBooks | Covid-19 Resources for British Columbians:

    • A directory of online resources dealing with the ways Covid-19 public health directives are affecting people’s lives, chapters include employment, housing, family law, businesses, finances, and indigenous.

Family Law BC | Coronavirus and the law: Your questions answered:

    • Q&A resource from Legal Aid BC covering topics including violence, rental properties, courts, welfare, parenting and other supports.

People’s Law School (BC) | Coronavirus: Your legal questions answered:

    • Q&A written by lawyers, includes help for small business owners, cancelling flights, scams, and signing a contract or a will.

Justice Education Society | Legal Help BC: Q&A’s on consumers and money and work:

    • Q&A resource for questions concerning how COVID-19 will affect issues around consumer law and money, and small business in British Columbia.

National Self-Represented Litigants Project | COVID-19 Resources:

    • Resources for representing yourself and access to justice.

Access to e-resources during closure (updated – March 31)

Students and Faculty,

While the physical building may be closed, the law library team is still here to support your research and learning.

New or expanded access to e-resources during closure

(**Updated March 31st**)

UVic Libraries has been working on securing expanded access to online materials during our closure. You will find below a list of new online resources that are available during the closure. We will update this list as we hear from publishers.

You can see a full list of UVic Libraries’ law related e-resources on the A-Z list of law databases. The law librarians are also updating the Key Legal Treatises and Textbooks Research Guide by adding links to ebooks as they become available.

Lexis Advance QuicklawLexisNexis Canada has agreed to provide expanded access to 80+ additional legal ebooks and resources on Lexis Advance Quicklaw until April 30, 2020.

Canadian Guide to Uniform Legal Citation (aka the ‘McGill Guide’) – Thomson Reuters has agreed to provide online access to law students and faculty on the WestlawNext Canada platform.

The Guide is available from the WestlawNext homepage:

 

eReference on ProView – Faculty and students can access all Thomson Reuters/Carswell looseleafs the library currently subscribes to online using the ProView ebook platform.

Irwin Law – UVic Libraries has a subscription to all Irwin Law ebooks. Irwin has agreed to remove the 3-user limit for all books in their e-library collection until further notice. You can browse/search the Irwin Law ebooks on the desLibris platform.

Hart Law Books : Bloomsbury Professional – Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic the library purchased the 2020 frontlist of Hart Law books. Bloomsbury has offered to provide free access to the UVic community all pre 2020 Hart Law titles available on its ebook platform until May 31, 2020. The full list of books available is viewable on Bloomsbury Collections.

Edward Elgar – The library has purchased the 2020 law collection from Elgar. Students and Faculty now have access to Elgar law ebooks published between 2018-2020. The full list of books available is viewable on ElgarOnline.

CLE Online – The law library has online access to the majority of CLE BC’s practice manuals and course materials. Please contact lawref@uvic.ca for the login credentials.

Technical issues

Students and Faculty – if you are experiencing access issues to WestlawNext, Lexis Advance Quicklaw or CLE BC Online, please report the problem to lawref@uvic.ca. If you are experiencing access issues to any other online library resource, please report the problem to esourcehelp@uvic.libanswers.com.

Reference services

The Law Library will continue to offer research and citation help to students and faculty during the closure via email, phone and video conferencing. To set up a reference appointment please contact us at lawref@uvic.ca. Our lawref@uvic.ca email will be monitored daily Monday to Friday during the closure.

2020 Research-a-thon: Plastics

This Friday (February 28), is the all-day Plastics Research-a-thon event.  The Environmental Law Club has partnered with the Environmental Law Centre, as well as the UBC Environmental Law Group  and Thompson Rivers University  to research plastic waste policy in 34 countries and 2 international organizations around the world.

The law librarians have created a comprehensive website for this year’s research-a-thon to help  students identify and work with valuable resources in the law library collection, including library resource guides, websites, reports, books, and journal articles.   There is also a country specific resource document, which links to the legislation, policy, and case law as well as secondary sources related to plastic waste for each country.

The law librarians will be on hand throughout the day, to help with process of researching foreign and international law.

The event runs from 9am-5pm in room 265 of the law library, with a lunchtime panel in room 150 with Calvin Sandborn, Q.C., the Legal Director of the Environmental Law Centre, and Daniel Brendle-Moczuk, the subject librarian for geography, environmental studies, maps and GIS, economics, sociology and data (social sciences and humanities).

Legal Research Refresher Sessions

Do the LRW research tutorials seem like a distant memory? Are you staring at your open memo not knowing where to start?

Then come to one of our lunch hour research refresher sessions presented by the law librarians in the Law Library computer lab!  No preregistration required.

Week 1 : Emphasis on secondary sources and resources 

Monday Jan 27:   12:30-1:30 – Canadian state law

Wednesday Jan 29: 12:30-1:30 – Indigenous law

Thursday Jan 30 12:30-1: 30 – Canadian state law (repeat of Monday’s session)

Week 2: emphasis on citation

Monday Feb 3: 12:30-1:30 – Legal citation

Thursday Feb 6: 12:30-1:30 –  Legal citation (repeat of Monday’s session)

The law library also has a legal research and writing guide: https://libguides.uvic.ca/lrw that you may find helpful as you are working on your open memo assignment. There you can find a research strategy overview, links to a sample research plan, and primary and secondary legal research starting points.

If you have any questions … remember, we’re here to help you. Ask us!

Regards,

Alex, Emily, and Sarah

 

ORCiD workshop for students

The UVic Digital Scholarship Commons is offering workshops on how to set up an ORCiD.  ORCiD is a identifier unique to you which you can attach to all your scholarly work. A few of the benefits are that it avoids mistaken identity with scholars with the same name and  in the event of a name change it allows scholarly work published under different names to be linked together.

The Workshop is offered in room 209 of the Mearns Centre for Learning/McPherson Library. The dates for the workshops are:

Wednesday, October 23, 2019 between 12:00pm -1:00pm

Monday, October 28, 2019 between 12:00pm -1:00pm

Wednesday, October 30, 2019 between 12:00pm -1:00pm

Click here to sign up for a workshop date.

Visit the ORCiD libguide to find out more information about ORCiD.

2019 Research-a-Thon: Getting Current with the Current

This Friday is the all-day 2019 Research-a-thon: “Getting Current with the Current” event.  The Environmental Law Club has partnered with the Environmental Law Centre and the Indigenous Legal Research Unit, to look at water law using both colonial and Indigenous research methodologies, focusing on water law in Nicola Valley.

Law librarians Sarah and Alex prepared a targeted and comprehensive research guide website to help the students identify and work with valuable resources in the law library collection, including BC legislative research content in our Quickscribe, HeinOnline, LLMC Digital, and BC Laws databases. It also incorporates the  legislative starting points compiled by former ELC articling student Renata, and Kim’s chapter on researching BC legislation, as well as a list of Indigenous Law Resources.

The librarians will be on hand throughout the day, to help with the intricate process of historical legislative and contextual legal research.

The event runs from 10am – 5pm, with a lunchtime panel discussion from 11:30-12:30 in rm 157  featuring Deborah Curran from the Environmental Law Centre and Chief Harvey McLeod of the Upper Nicola Band.

 

Marginalia: The Flitcraft Parable

Photo: Paul Totzke

Welcome to Marginalia. While our stated goal is to keep everyone up to date with the services we provide here at the circulation desk, the general idea is to present the information in a light-hearted, but relevant manner.

(Theme Music)

“The problem with putting two and two together is that sometimes you get four, and sometimes you get twenty-two.” Dashiell Hammett – ‘The Thin Man’.

Radio Noir Presents:

Raymond Marlowe, Private Investigator.

In

‘The Flitcraft Parable’

The name’s Marlowe and I’m a Private Investigator with the James M. Cain Detective Agency.

I’d been up all night working on ‘The Environmental Research Affair’. The boss had promised me a week off after solving the ‘Chinatown Caper’, but the Agency now thought the two cases were related and they desperately needed a solid lead. The job certainly looked simple enough – locate a missing document on Indigenous water rights and deliver it to a group of concerned stakeholders. Fortunately, I did have one clue to guide me; a severely crumpled piece of paper with an almost indecipherable series of oddly spaced numbers and letters scrawled across it (DMPLL-RM-171).

Thanks to a tip from an unnamed, but reliable source, I started the investigation with a visit to a top notch environmental lawyer named Calvin Sandborn, Q.C. (the Queen’s Counsel designation alone let you know right away that he was a man who knew a thing or two about a thing or two). Letting my fingers do the walking I tracked him down to a busy, well-staffed, second floor office inside the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria. Sandborn was good, but he couldn’t do much more than direct me to the Circulation Desk at the Diana M. Priestly Law Library Circulation Desk one floor below.

I flashed my Community Borrower’s card and proceeded to query the on duty staff member about the missing information I needed to solve the case. She asked a few pertinent questions and politely suggested that I start my search with Alexander Burdett at the reference desk. Unfortunately, due to the upcoming influx of mid-term exams, there was an extremely long, rather nervous looking line of students in front of me, so I headed back to the circulation desk.

I asked for the location of any material on Indigenous water rights and she informed me that the majority of the items on the subject were in the process of being shipped over from the McPherson Library and they would arrive in a day of two. I took a chance and asked what else might be available on the subject. She checked the circulation module and noted that the remaining material was in the process of being collected for an Environmental Law Course ‘Research-A-Thon’ the following week and was therefore temporarily inaccessible.

As expected, the boss was none too happy about the turn of events and told me, in no uncertain terms, that if I enjoyed working for the James M. Cain Detective Agency on a regular basis I should locate the missing material ASAP.

Noting that the law library was open on weekends, I called early on Saturday morning and asked if a ‘HOLD’ could be placed on the requested material until I could pick it up. Unfortunately that type of request did not apply to items that were shelved in the reserve room.  However, she smiled, the requested material would be ready by opening time on Sunday.

After reviewing the case file that night, I woke up early and headed over to the library by 10am. During a brief, but informative Q&A with the morning supervisor we eventually located the missing item on a book truck in the reserve room of the Law Library.

With the required document now firmly in hand, I asked about my options. The library staff member advised me that I could either check it out for two hours and/or photocopy the information. She then pointed out that, according to the official looking notice taped to the front of the the copier, I was limited to 10% of a copyrighted work or one entire chapter of a book. Seeing how I only needed one page I decided to purchase a vend card (on the company expense account of course) and copy both sides of the document.

It was only after I reached for my wallet that I remembered about the cryptic notation. I unfolded the note and studied the information on it (DMPLL-RM-171). Looking up, I noticed the sign behind the circulation desk and suddenly realized that the code was someone’s scribbled shorthand for the Diana M. Priestly Law Library Room 171.

Case closed.

The boss was ecstatic, the clients were euphoric, and my bonus covered a fifth of finely blended, imported Scotch Whiskey. Arriving home early, I set the radio dial to a local jazz station, cracked the seal, and carefully poured myself a healthy three-fingered shot. The only thing left to do now was to open my dog-eared copy of ‘The Maltese Falcon’ and try, for at least the twenty-second time, to decipher that strange business about a character named Flitcraft and his fascination with falling beams.

It was getting late and I was just savouring the last drop of Scotch when it slowly dawned on me that Dashiell Hammett’s mysterious parable had everything to do with the idea of contentment.

(Theme Music)

Please be sure to join us for our next action packed adventure of ‘Raymond Marlowe, Private Investigator’, in ‘The Case of the Missing McGuffin’, right here on ‘Radio Noir Presents’.

We now return you to our regularly scheduled programming.

Prose: david eugene everard © 2019

Legal Research and Citation Refreshers in January

Voyager, CED, Abridgment, Halsbury’s—sound vaguely familiar but could be Dr. Who characters as easily as Canadian legal research tools?
Then try to make it to one of our noon hour legal research refreshers, presented by the law librarians in the Law Library computer lab. No preregistration required. The Wednesday sessions are repeats of the Monday sessions.

Week 1 (emphasis research strategies and materials)
Monday, Jan 21:               12:00 – 1:00 pm
Wednesday, Jan 23:      12:00 – 1:00 pm

Week 2 (emphasis citations)

Monday, Jan 28:              12:00 – 1:00 pm
Wednesday, Jan 30:     12:00 – 1:00 pm

The law library also has legal research and writing guide: https://libguides.uvic.ca/lrw that you may find helpful as you are working on your open memo assignment. There you can find a research strategy overview, links to sample research plans and journals, and primary and secondary legal research starting points.

If you have any questions … remember, we’re here to help you. Ask us!

Research Help Desk Closures

On the dates of the research refreshers, the Research Help Desk will be closed from 11:30 am – 1:30 pm. Research help will remain available at the desk from 3:00 – 5:00 pm or by appointment.

Regards,

Kim Nayyer, Caron Rollins , Alex Burdett & Sarah Miller