Today I learnt about the Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law. There's a definite foreign and international law slant to my posts since I started work at IALS Global Law Library...
Edited by RĂ¼diger Wolfrum, Director at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law, the encyclopaedia is an extremely comprehensive, peer-reviewed online encyclopaedia. You can browse by title, subject or author or run a search across the content.
http://www.mpepil.com/home
They say you learn something new every day. I'm a law librarian. What did I learn today? **Sadly I don't have the time to update this blog anymore. I'll leave it live for the sake of posterity for a little while longer**
Showing posts with label encyclopaedias. Show all posts
Showing posts with label encyclopaedias. Show all posts
Friday, 23 November 2012
Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law
Thursday, 8 November 2012
Wex: the online legal dictionary and encyclopaedia
Today I learnt about Wex, a freely available online legal
dictionary and encyclopaedia, written by legal experts. It’s hosted by the
Legal Information Institute at Cornell Law School.
It’s aimed at “law novices” but can be handy for those
researchers who want to do a quick web search rather than refer to the tried
and trusted hardcopy dictionaries and encyclopaedias we librarians tend to
prefer.
To ensure quality of entries, contributors are currently
limited to those in the “selective author pool”. There is no hard and fast rule
about who may contribute, but preference is given to legal academics and
distinguished practitioners, and those with legal qualifications.
The entries are quite comprehensive and sometimes links are
provided to the relevant entry in Nolo’s Plain-English Law Dictionary, which
can be useful for non/new-lawyers. You can search and browse, as you’d expect.
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