A big congratulations to Prof. Imre Szalai and his students!! The amicus brief filed by Prof. Szalai was quoted by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in a recent dissenting opinion.
DirecTV, Inc. v. Imburgia, No. 14-462, slip opinion at 5 n.1 (U.S. Dec. 14, 2015) (Ginsburg, J., dissenting). The opinion can be found online at: http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/15pdf/14-462_2co3.pdf.
Brief for Law Professors as Amici Curiae Supporting Respondents, DirecTV, Inc. v. Imburgia, No. 14-462 (U.S. July 24, 2015). The full brief can be found on Bloomberg Law.
Tuesday, December 15, 2015
Monday, December 14, 2015
Immigration Briefings: A Resource You Should Know
This monthly periodical
is a must-use for any immigration practitioners and researchers. It provides
up-to-date analysis on a variety of important issues written by practitioners
and commentators.
The print version is available in the library on the second
floor at KF 4800.A15. An electronic version is available on WestlawNext. Simply
begin typing in the title and select it on the pop-up options. Then you can
search this resource the way you would anything else in WestlawNext.
Recent article titles include:
- Families Behind Bars: The Intersection of Politics, Law, and Detention
- Handling the Complex Naturalization Application
- The Tricky Triangle: Marriage, Divorce, and Permanent Residence
- Healthy Regardless of Status: Expanding Access to Health Care for Noncitizens
Monday, December 7, 2015
Electronic Resource of the Month: HeinOnline Law Journal Library
Many of you are probably familiar
with finding law journal articles in Lexis Advance and WestlawNext. This month
we’re taking a look at another place to find law journal articles
electronically, the HeinOnline Law Journal Library.
Why use Hein when Westlaw and Lexis
are so search-friendly and you might be there for other materials? Two great
reasons: Years covered and format.
Years
covered: Hein often has a greater archive of journals, reaching further
into the past. For example, the Loyola Law Review is available from the
following dates: Hein – 1941, WestlawNext – 1982, Lexis Advance – 1998.
Format:
Use Hein if you want to
read the article as it appeared in the journal or if you need an official
source for an assignment. The articles on Hein can be considered an official
source because they are PDF scans of the journals.
You can access Hein through the library’s website using the
Online Resources page from the homepage. You’ll have to scroll until you find
Hein, or you can search for the term. You can see on our webpage all of the
Hein collections you have access to, which provide a great range of current and
past information for primary and secondary sources.
Once in the Law Journal Library, you can utilize the
advanced search feature at the top of the page and search by article title,
author, subject, state or country published, full text, and narrow by date. After
an initial search, you can further refine using the options on the left hand
side menu, including subject, periodical title, country of publication, and
date range. Selecting an article will bring you to the PDF scan of the article
as it appears in the journal of publication. On the top menu, you can download
a PDF of the article, select download or print options, or select a particular
page from that volume of the journal using the drop-down menu. Click on the
left and right arrows on the top and bottom of the document to navigate to the
previous or next page.
If you already have a journal citation and want to quickly
find the article, you can use the citation search option. Selection citation at
the top of the page; you can type the citation in there, but a better option is
to select “Citation Navigator”. As you type in the journal abbreviation in the
boxes provided, suggested titles will appear.
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