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The RIPS Law Librarian Blog is published by the Research, Instruction, and Patron Services Special Interest Section (RIPS-SIS) of the American Association of Law Libraries. All opinions expressed in the posts herein are those of the individual author and do not represent the opinions of RIPS-SIS or AALL.
Guest posts from RIPS-SIS members are encouraged; please contact the blog editor.
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Recent posts
- Navigating Legal Reference Questions Without a Legal Background May 10, 2024
- The “Why” of Learning Legal Research May 7, 2024
- Lessons from Student Feedback May 3, 2024
- Un-Google Your Search: Exploring Search Alternatives May 2, 2024
- From the Ground Up April 25, 2024
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- mmikkels on Un-Google Your Search: Exploring Search Alternatives
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Category Archives: Empirical legal research
When Bad Graphs Happen to Good Papers
For those of us who assist faculty or students in their empirical research endeavors , I thought I would highlight a resource that we can share with them to prevent bad graphs from happening to good papers. “Legal Writing: Getting … Continue reading
Posted in Empirical legal research, Legal Research
Tagged charts, empirical legal research, graphs, legal writing books
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Environmental Data
This semester, I’ve been doing some work with environmental law research and in so doing I’ve gained some familiarity with the EPA website. Each time I visit the website, I am struck by the massive amount of data it provides … Continue reading