Summer Research Help in the Law Library

If you’re a law student registered in summer session or working as a faculty summer research assistant, you might notice the research help desk (reference desk) in the law library is unattended this summer.

Though the desk is quiet, research help remains available.

Students, you’re encouraged to email or phone the usual research help contacts. The librarians receive email and phone messages at those contacts and will respond as quickly as possible, Monday through Friday. You may also make an appointment with a librarian for research help via the staff at the library circulation desk.

BC legislation now free at BC Laws

QP LegalEze, familiar to the UVic law community as the BC Queen’s Printer’s deep and highly functional subscription service for current and some historical legislative information, is no more. Or, more accurately, it will be by subscription no more.

All of its content and functionality now is being made available through BC Laws, the free site also offered by the Queen’s Printer:

BC Laws has been upgraded to provide enhanced searching and more content including historical legislation and related publications such as BC Gazette, full text Orders-in-Council, and Tables of Legislative Changes. All content is delivered in an “open data format” and restrictions on commercial and non-commercial use of the data have been changed (read more).

This means the UVic Libraries subscription to QP LegalEze will soon disappear, but the content won’t. We’ll be able to access all of it through BC Laws. See the April 2, 2014 BC government news release for details about the transition process.

Some jurisdictions—Ontario and the federal, for example—have offered free and more or less current access to primary law for years, with some depth of historical content and ability to manipulate searches to locate the law at particular points in time. Other jurisdictions, like BC, have offered excellent historical and current legislative content by paid subscription, with a limited range of primary content available on companion free sites. And opening up the data is a great new step.

If freer access to primary law were not a good enough thing, it’s wonderful and exciting that the content on BC Law—all of it—is delivered as open data, under a Queen’s Printer License. The license enables, among other activities, full and partial content reuse and publication for commercial and non-commercial purposes, subject to appropriate conditions. To this end, the Queen’s Printer has also released access to the API underlying BC Laws.

Exam period updates: Study room access; extended hours

As we enter the last week of term, we wish all students the best for exams, papers, and assignments. We wish to ensure we offer all law students the support and study environment that is needed at this time. We alert all library users to the following updates and reminders:

  • For the period of March 24 through April 22, group study room access in the law library is limited to law students. Rooms may be booked at the front desk of the law library.
  • Extended weekend hours are now in place, with the law library open until 10 pm each night except Friday.
  • Finally, we trust all law library users will respect the increased need for quiet study at this time.

Many thanks and happy studying.

March 7: UVic Law Community Conference 2014

The annual UVic Law Community Conference, 2014 edition, is this Friday, March 7. The free event welcomes students from all faculties and communities, and all who are interested are also welcomed.

This year’s focus is to provide a venue to discuss solutions to the problem of access to justice in Canada.

Read about the 2014 Community Conference, and see the Program for the lineup of top-notch speakers and sessions.

Research help service in the law library will be available by appointment on March 7th. Please contact lawref@uvic.ca to schedule an appointment.

Debates of Parliament (federal Hansard) Fully Online

“Hansard geeks, rejoice”:

Hansard geeks rejoice. The historical debates of the Parliament of Canada are now online. http://t.co/U36gzDG61O #cdnpoli #Hansard
— LoPInformation (@LoPInformation) November 20, 2013

The full digitized historical federal Hansard, Senate and House of Commons, is available online, AND it’s browsable and searchable. Canadiana.org’s Historical Debates of the Parliament of Canada portal was launched in November 2013: http://parl.canadiana.ca/

The portal complements the content that has been available on parl.gc.ca (House: 1994 onward; Senate: 1996 onward), to create a full collection of digital federal Hansard.

New Historical Debates of Parliament of Canada portal : more than 1575 digitized volumes, totalling 1.6 M page images. #cndpoli #Hansard
— LoPInformation (@LoPInformation) November 19, 2013

For your convenience, UVic Libraries have created records that allow you to access all of Hansard:

Full details about the portal and the search functions are here: http://parl.canadiana.ca/support/about.

Attn 1Ls: Legal research resource refreshers

CED, Abridgment, Halsbury’s—sound vaguely familiar but could equally be Doctor Who characters as Canadian legal research tools?

Then try to make it to one of the library’s is offering legal research refreshers, presented by Michael Lines of the law library.

All refresher sessions will be in the law library computer lab. Here’s the schedule:

Mon Jan 13: 12:00-12:30 and 12:30-1:00
Thu Jan 16: 12:30-1:00
Mon Jan 20: 12:00-12:30 and 12:30-1:00
Wed Jan 22: 12:00-12:30 and 12:30-1:00

No preregistration required.

Also keep in mind the library’s legal research and writing guide: http://libguides.uvic.ca/lrw. There you can find a research strategy overview, links to sample research plans and journals, and primary and secondary legal research starting points.

Exam Time

We wish all students the very best for end-of-term exams and papers. We’re pleased to provide what we hope is a pleasant and welcoming space to study and work.

The law library may become busier at this time of year, as more students from other faculties seek study space here.

The law library is a shared space in the university, and everyone is welcome. The second floor of the law library is a quiet study area, and law library staff work to ensure it remains this way.

At this time of year students are able to book group study rooms up to a week in advance, via the front desk, and we encourage law students to take advantage of this opportunity to ensure study space in the law library. This will continue until the end of December exams and, we hope, will help to ensure you have space when you need it.