Nominate Public Interest Law Blogs for the ABA Journal Blawg 100

For a few years now I’ve argued that the ABA Journal Blawg 100 should include a public interest law category. My slacktivist campaign has included annual tweets expressing my disappointment when the results are published and even an email sometime back to the ABA Journal. This year I intend go the extra mile! Rather than complaining about it after the fact, I want to encourage folks to proactively nominate some of the great blogs covering public interest legal issues for the Blawg 100 Amici (the Blawg 100’s online nomination process). Here are some examples of hard-hitting, informative, and prolific public interest blawgs that I plan to nominate this year:

ACLU Blog of Rights
American Constitution Society Blog
Brennan Center for Justice Blog
The Shriver Brief
Wired’s Threat Level

Of course, these are just a few of the many great legal aid and public interest law blogs out there, many of which can be found on our Blogroll. Hopefully this year a flood of submissions will prompt the ABA Journal’s editors to consider including a category that recognizes the important contributions that legal aid and public interest advocates and organizations make to the legal blawgosphere. -M

 

Legal Aid Advocates Using Online Resources More Than Ever Before

[Editor's Note: The following post is by the Shriver Center’s Web and e-Communications Director, Michelle Nicolet. It shares data from a recent survey by editors of the Clearinghouse Review on the use of online tools and resources by legal aid advocates. We asked Michelle if she would write up the results of the survey in a guest blog post for technola, and she was kind enough to agree. We’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments. –M]

Legal aid advocates have an array of online resources at their fingertips. Moreover, the growth of social media offers new ways for advocates to connect with and learn from one another. But which resources are advocates using? A recent survey conducted by the Editorial Team of Clearinghouse Review: Journal of Poverty Law and Policy attempted to learn more about poverty lawyers’ current use of online resources.

The survey, conducted in April and May 2011, received 285 responses from legal services and other advocates working in 43 states. By a wide margin, the most popular online resource used for legal research or professional development is listservs, which are used by 81% of respondents. Other popular resources include government websites (72.9%), webinars and webinar recordings (64.4%), Westlaw (53.5%), statewide websites (53.5%), and the respondents’ own programs’ websites or intranets (48.9%). Lesser used resources include podcasts (7%) and law-related blogs or “blawgs” (25.1%).

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Respondents show more willingness to read online than ever before. When asked how an online-only version of Clearinghouse Review would affect their use of the journal, 38% said they would be more likely to read the Review, and 48% said their use of the Review would not be affected. Only 14% of respondents said that they would be less likely to read the Review if it were only available online. This is a significant shift from just a few years ago. In a 2007 survey, 81% of respondents reported that they did not regularly read Clearinghouse Review online.

Some of the increased willingness to use online resources may be traced to the availability of content on mobile devices. Over 45% of respondents to the survey reported reading web content on a mobile phone or tablet device, with 73% of those reporting that they read content on a mobile device daily. Clearly, the next generation of legal aid websites should be mobile-friendly to ensure the broadest accessibility by advocates.

Only 29.1% of respondents indicated that they use RSS newsfeeds to stay on top of relevant news and information. Although this is a slightly higher percentage than reported in a similar 2007 survey, it still seems surprisingly low and possibly presents an opportunity for training.

In addition, although more respondents reported using social media than in earlier surveys, professional use of social media is still quite limited. The most popular network for professional use, LinkedIn, is still not used by a majority of respondents. Even Facebook and YouTube, which a majority of respondents reported using for personal reasons, are scarcely used by respondents to connect with one another professionally. The potential impact of social networking to support communication and collaboration around poor people’s issues remains largely unrealized in the legal services community.

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The editors of Clearinghouse Review are grateful to the survey respondents for their input. Through the Review and related content, we seek to promote coordinated affirmative advocacy efforts, support an emerging generation of advocates for social and economic justice, and foster a sense of community among legal aid and poverty lawyers. The information collected in this and other surveys will be extraordinarily helpful as we plan future content for Clearinghouse Review.

 

RECOP Releases Court Opinions With No Reuse Restriction

Starting in 2011, the Report of Current Opinions (RECOP) will be released by Public.Resource.Org. RECOP will contain the slip and final opinions from all of the federal and state appellate and supreme courts. These opinions will be formatted, have full star pagination, and will not have any restriction on reuse.

Public.Resource.Org, a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit, is undertaking this project for at most two years with the help of its Law.Gov partners, including Fastcase, Justia, Stanford, Princeton, and Cornell. By 2013, Public.Resource.Org wants the government to step up and "provide the basic primary legal materials in a way that meets the strong consensus arrived at in the Law.Gov Principles."

Most self-represented litigants and legal aid clients won't be dramatically affected by RECOP, but it should have some impact. Legal research will potentially be less expensive for legal and pro bono attorneys, and in the long-term, a legal system that functions better and is more transparent, which are the aims of RECOP and Law.Gov, benefits everyone.

If you want more information about RECOP, check out these articles:

Also, additional information about RECOP will be sent to the Law.Gov email list in the middle of January. - K

Lex Mundi Launches LawForChange.org

Lex Mundi recently launched LawForChange.org, an online legal resource for social entrepreneurs, innovators, charities, community organizations, philanthropies, faith-based organizations and other nonprofits. It includes a section with legal resources, including a start-up kit, audit checklist, and substantive materials that are searchable by topic and jurisdiction (state). The site also hosts an interactive discussion forum and a blog. -M

Newly Launched Sites Focus on Access to Legal Information

Spring is the season of fresh starts, and it seems websites are taking it to heart. Just this week, two sites intended to connect the public with relevant legal information were launched.

The Australian Government launched Access to Justice to help the public find both legal aid and private lawyers. This site is part of a series of initiatives launched by the Attorney-General for Australia to make the Australian justice system more accessible.

The United States Courts also relaunched its site with a spiffy new design. Along with the expected static information about the federal court system, you'll also find podcasts, widgets you can embed in your own site, a link to The Federal Judiciary's Channel on YouTube, and other multimedia. State website coordinators should direct their attention to the bankruptcy area, which includes a Bankruptcy Basics section and a series of bankruptcy videos in English and Spanish. For the full list of enhancements, see the US Court's news release.

Have you noticed any other legal websites that have shed their winter coats? Or do you have some website spring cleaning of your own planned? Tell us about it in the comments. - K

Recently Released Legal Resources

Watching Twitter, Facebook, and my news feeds over the past couple of months, I've been amazed at how many organizations are announcing new resources for advocates and the public. Some of those resources include

Consumer

Domestic Violence

Education

Estate Planning

Housing

Immigration

General Legal Information

Thank you to @shrivercenter, @ABACtrProBono, @kmontenegro, @CLEONet@ProBono_GA, Pennsylvania Legal Aid Network, and the many others (whom I didn't write down) who pointed out these resources. - K

Public Libraries and Access to Justice Conference Materials

The materials from the 2010 Public Libraries and Access to Justice Conference, which took place on January 11th and 12th in Austin, Texas, are now posted on Webjunction and selfhelpsupport.org (membership required). Our previous post about this conference is available here. -M

Increasing Access to Justice through Technology in Illinois

 

As part of their year-end fundraising campaign, Illinois Legal Aid Online (ILAO) has created a video that does a fantastic job of highlighting the potential of technology to help increase access to justice for low and moderate-income individuals. It focuses on LiveHelp, a project funded by the Legal Services Corporation, supported by Pro Bono Net, and originally piloted by Montana Legal Services Association and Iowa Legal Aid, which was recently launched in Illinois to assist those in need of legal help find quality free legal information, forms, and referrals. As the video portrays, in less than a month ILAO and their remote law student volunteers assisted over 1,300 users. It’s an excellent example how the innovative use of technology can help to mobilize volunteers, increase access to services, and ultimately address the unmet legal needs facing so many low and moderate-income Americans. Please consider donating to justice innovators like Illinois Legal Aid Online and Pro Bono Net this holiday season. Without them, projects like LiveHelp wouldn’t exist. -M

 

Training on Public Libraries and Access to Justice

The National Center for State Courts, the Self-Represented Litigation Network, and the Legal Services Corporation are hosting a two-day conference on how public libraries can improve access to online legal information. The training takes place on January 11th and 12th in Austin, TX. Participants will learn how to access legal information online and how to develop effective partnerships between libraries and legal services organizations, among other topics. Conference organizers will select between 10 and 15 teams from around the country to participate. More information about the training is available here. -M

 

Interactive Food Stamp Usage Map

The New York Times recently published an interactive map showing food stamp usage in the United States, which includes the ability to filter by whites, blacks, children, and change since 2007.  Raw data by county, which should be useful to legal services advocates seeking to better understand (and visualize) the specific areas and populations that they serve, is also available for download here (CSV). A related article about record highs in food stamp usage can be found here. -M

 

Google Scholar Blog Post Round Up

Since Google Scholar was announced last week, bloggers have been speculating on what effect it will have on legal research, the practice of law, and the public's access. A few noteworthy posts covering the main areas of discussion:

The Big Winners: Law Students?
From Laura Bergus' post Google Scholar Search Now Includes U.S. Case Law and Legal Journals," it sounds like the big winners will be law students who now have another legal research option, which comes with an easier to use interface that they are accustomed to using.

Will Anyone Need a Lawyer?
Jane Genova at Law and More suggests that Google Scholar will be a great legal research tool for self-represented litigants in her post Everyman a Legal Player: Google Scholar. Taking a more realistic view, Scott Greenfield in The End of the Duopoly at Simple Justice recognizes that case law is hard to understand, doubly so for the average person, whether or not it's freely available.

What About LexisNexis and West?
The greatest amount of ink has been used to analyze the impact on LexisNexis and West. Over at My Shingle, Carolyn Elefant's post Free Legal Research by Google & What It Means looks at this issue.

Is It Any Good?
Most agree that it's a good start for Google. But how does it compare? People are trying to find out, including Greg Lambert and Toby Brown at 3 Geeks and a Law Blog. They want use crowdsourcing as a part of their test and are asking for your ideas. Check out Greg's post We Need You - Ideas for Testing Google Scholar Via Crowdsourcing. - K

Berkman Center Launches Initiative to Provide Pro Bono Legal Help to Online Journalists

Harvard’s Berkman Center recently launched the Online Media Legal Network (OMLN), a U.S. network of top law firms, law schools, in-house counsel, and lawyers willing to provide pro bono legal assistance to “qualifying online journalism ventures and other digital media creators.” Part of the Center’s Citizen Media Law Project, OMLN’s website allows lawyers to submit an application to provide legal assistance and clients to request legal help. Services include business formation and governance, copyright and fair use, access to government information, and employment issues, among others. A press release about the Network’s launch is available here. -M

 

Search Case Law and Legal Journals with Google Scholar

Google Scholar now includes case law and legal journals as part of its online collection of searchable scholarship. Users can either select “legal opinions and journals” when they initiate a basic search or use the advanced search to filter by state or federal court opinions. The results set includes a variety of useful metadata, including the case cite and “how cited,” a list of opinions that cite the source case. The collection also includes law review and journal articles, although these results are primarily links to HeinOnline, which requires a subscription. -M

Update: Here's the official post from the Google Blog.

 

Legal Information to Share

Legal information website coordinators, a post especially for you. I've collected several items that may be appropriate for your public or advocate sites.

Have you come across any other legal information sources recently that others should know about? Let us know in the comments.- K

Communities Prepare for Hurricane Ida

After a fairly uneventful hurricane season, Hurricane Ida is headed toward the United States. Ida is expected to land somewhere between Louisiana and Florida as early as Tuesday, and communities in these areas are preparing for the storm.

However, a more dispersed group is also getting ready. Earlier today, Andy Carvin called for online volunteers to help update The Hurricane Information Center, a hurricane information portal that Technola highlighted in 2008. Volunteers are needed to help with several tasks, but Andy says:

Most importantly, we need to update the wiki: http://hurricanewiki.org. We need volunteers to review the wiki section by section and make sure that there are resources collected for Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana. Much of this was done last year but it can't hurt to be sure it's up to date. If you plan to work on a section of the wiki, please let us know which one.

If you can help, speak up. If you don't have time to help review the wiki, take a few seconds to pass on Andy's request for help. Maybe someone in your network does.

On a related note, anyone looking for disaster legal information should check out Matthew's previous post "Online Disaster Legal Resources." - K

Penn Law Students Create Videos to Help Immigrants Avoid Fraud



Students in Penn Law School’s Program on Documentaries and the Law have created a series of videos on legal issues impacting immigrants, including notario fraud and the process of hiring and working with a lawyer. The videos are presented in Spanish, Mandarin, Cantonese, and Fuzhou. –M [Thanks, Will!]

Illinois Legal Aid Online Launches "LiveHelp" Project

Yesterday Illinois Legal Aid Online, the organization that oversees client, advocate and pro bono websites and other access to justice technology projects in Illinois, launched its LiveHelp project, which allows individuals to use a web-based chat service to communicate with a “navigator” to help them find legal information on their client website, IllinoisLegalAid.org. The LiveHelp project, which was funded by LSC’s TIG program, supported by Pro Bono Net, and originally spearheaded by legal aid organizations in Montana and Iowa, has now been successfully replicated in several states. For more information about LiveHelp, contact Liz Keith at lkeith (at) probono.net. -M

 

Firefox Add-ons for Legal Research

The ABA Legal Technology Resource Center scoured through the Firefox Add-on Directory and found four add-ons that lawyers can use to simplify research. Check out their blog post Firefox for Lawyers to learn more about CiteGenie, Jureeka, Iterasi, and Zotero. - K

National Center for State Courts Has New Website

The National Center for State Courts has redesigned their website and changed its web address to http://www.ncsc.org. If you never visited their old page, you've missed valuable resources for courts and those who work with courts about several topics, including plain language, legal aid and pro bono, and self-representation.

Social Networking Webinar Now Available Online

In July, Pro Bono Partnerships of Atlanta offered a webinar on the "Legal Issues of Social Networking." That session as well as several of their other legal trainings for nonprofit organizations are now available on their website. Thanks to Cheryl Zalenski of the ABA Center for Pro Bono for pointing this out. - K

Unlocking the PACER Paywall

Image by RECAP

 

The Center for Information Technology Policy at Princeton has just launched a new Firefox extension called RECAP that allows PACER users to help build an open repository of public court records (if you don’t use PACER, there is no reason to install this extension). Extensive coverage of the new add-on is available at ars technica, TechCrunch and cnet. -M

Minnesota Legal Services Coalition Launches SomaliLawHelp.org

The Minnesota Legal Services Coalition has launched SomaliLawHelp.org, a new legal resource for the Minnesota Somali community. Somali-language resources on the site include “know your rights” materials on topics ranging from family law to immigration, a legal glossary, and links to courts and government agencies. The site is built using technology developed by Pro Bono Net and supplements resources available on LawHelpMN.org, which includes a Spanish site and resources in 14 other languages. Local coverage of the new site is available here. –M [Thanks, Jessica!]

Blawg Review: A Carnival of Law Bloggers

With thousands of law blogs, trying to find and read the best of the best posts on a regular basis can be daunting. But every week, the hosts of the Blawg Review, a blog carnival, do just that. They read, examine, and extract the week's best and then put them together in one post, usually with a theme. For example, this week Scott Greenfield of Simple Justice hosted the Blawg Review: #223 - Sphincter Rules. (Due to unusual circumstances, he wasn't exactly prepared or happy about being volunteered.)

To follow the Blawg Review, you can subscribe with a news reader, follow blawgreview on Twitter, sign up to have it e-mailed to you, or check back at Blawg Review each Monday. You can also help the hosts out and submit a post that you'd like to see included in the Blawg Review.

Not interested in law, but want to know where to find blog carnivals on other topics? Check out Blog Carnival, where you'll find carnivals that cover everything from taxes to math teachers to cats. - K

The Findability Project Final Evaluation Report Available

Now Kate's at AALL Annual Meeting

After a rough flight and a happy landing, I'm back in the Baltimore area and attending the American Association of Law Libraries Annual Meeting in DC today. (Yep. A lot of travel, and it's not stopping. On Tuesday, I plan to be in College Park, Maryland at the Maryland Access to Justice Commission listening session.)

So today, in exchange for speaking about "Online Interactive Court Forms for Self-Represented Litigants: The Library's Role," I get to hang out with over 2,400 law librarians from across the US and around the world as well as listen to some great panels and visit the exhibit hall.

If you are here, please find me and say "hi." Otherwise, again I will post updates here at Technola as well as on Twitter. If you are interested in following the entire conference, which runs through Tuesday, you can search for #AALL2009 on Twitter.

And don't worry. I've have several more posts from BlogHer coming. - K

Nolo Offers Free Foreclosure Survival Guide

Nolo is making its “Foreclosure Survival Guide,” written by Stephen Elias, available for free online. In addition to a wealth of information on bankruptcy and foreclosure, the Guide also contains tips on nonprofit housing counselors, finding a lawyer, bankruptcy petition preparers and researching the law. -M

Get Legal Help Without the Cost



A recently aired ABC story (above) on the growth of self-help centers and websites as alternative sources of legal information for those who cannot afford a lawyer. Featured sites include LawHelp.org, the American Bar Association and Illinois Legal Aid Online, as well as a few commercial legal websites. -M [Thanks Eve and Allison!]

 

West Supports Lawyers Providing Free Legal Services

Today, West announced two new websites with resources for lawyers.

  • Do Justice. This site is an entry point for law firms that want to use Westlaw for their pro bono cases. West hopes to donate more than $12 million of Westlaw access to law firms in 2009.
  • Between Cases. A resource for unemployed lawyers, this site offers job search tools and training materials. Also, it has information for lawyers who want to continue or start to provide pro bono legal services.

The full press release is available at PR Newswire. -K

Searching the Deep Web with DeepDyve

Did you know that when you search the Web with Google, you are searching only about 0.2 percent of the Web. The remainder, more than 66,800 terabytes, is part of the Deep Web, or the part of the Web that search engines haven't indexed. (For reference, 1 terabyte is 50,000 trees made into paper and printed.)

So what does the Deep Web contain? According to Wikipedia,

  • Dynamic content: pages that are created on the fly.
  • Unlinked content: pages that aren't linked to and don't link to any other content.
  • Private Web: password-protected pages.
  • Contextual Web: pages that display different content depending on who or what you are.
  • Limited access content: pages protected by CAPTCHAs or other technical methods.
  • Scripted pages: pages that are accessible only through links produced by JavaScript.
  • Non-HTML/text content: content in file formats not handled by search engines.

A lot of researchers are examining how to access this invisible content. Last week, one potential contender in the race to expose the Deep Web launched, DeepDyve. This search engine is using techniques used in the field of genomics, an approach that differs significantly from Google's approach. The company behind the search engine is marketing it as a research engine. So while it works for searches that bring up movie times, hockey game scores, and so on, DeepDyve aims to help researchers do better research.

Unfortunately, I don't do a lot of scholarly research, so I turned to the first academic that I thought of--my Dad--and found that he is cited in Wikipedia. But that doesn't really tell me whether DeepDyve is better at research than Google. So I'd love to hear from some of you who do more research than I do. What do you think of DeepDyve? - K

Sunlight Foundation Suggests Facelift for SCOTUS Website

Have you looked at the Supreme Court of the United States website recently? It's not very user friendly, the available information is limited, and the design is a bit dated.

And I'm not the only person who thinks so. The Sunlight Foundation, a non-partisan nonprofit that works "to foster more openness and accountability in government," recently suggested that the site should be redesigned and recommended ways that the Supreme Court can "make the Court’s proceedings transparent, incorporate modern design principles, and meet the higher expectations of today’s web user." The resulting mock ups are beautiful and suggest several great ways to make the site more useful.

Fortunately, it also sounds like the Court recognizes the limitations of its current site and has asked for funding for a site redesign. Personally, I'd love to see the Court work with the Sunlight Foundation to implement a version of these designs. What a great opportunity to open the courthouse doors and save money at the same time! - K

Online Disaster Law Resources

One of the Equal Justice Conference sessions that I was involved in, Making Recovery From Disasters Easier Through Technology, addressed various ways that technology is being used by legal services organizations and others in the wake of natural disasters. Below is a list of online resources on disaster law that were covered during the session, as well as a few others I came across while researching this post:

Additionally, many statewide advocate websites have disaster law resources, including the Georgia Online Justice Community, probono.net/iowa, probono.net/la, and FloridaAdvocate.org. If you're aware of other online disaster law resources, please include them in the comments. -M

 

Free Friday: More Online Case Law

Three Public Interest Websites Nominated for Best Law Site in 13th Annual Webby Awards

It’s time again for the Webby Awards, but this year there’s a twist. Of the five legal websites nominated for Best Law Site, three focus on public interest topics: the Immigration Advocates Network, WomensLaw.org and Workplace Fairness. They are joined by last year’s nominee, JURIST, and a newcomer commercial law site, GetLegal.com. Hailed as the "Internet's highest honor" by the New York Times, The Webby Awards is the leading international award honoring excellence on the Internet. From now until April 30th, you can cast your vote in the Law category (and 70 others) in The Webby People's Voice Awards at http://pv.webbyawards.com. Winners will be announced on May 5th, 2009 and honored at a ceremony in New York City on June 8th.  –M

Beyond LexisNexis & Westlaw: New Online Legal Research Guide by UCLA

UCLA has just launched an excellent new guide to online legal research resources, Beyond LexisNexis & Westlaw. The Guide covers primary law, government resources, research guides, reference sources, forms, and legal news. It also includes a special section on California law and a list of attorney directories. -M

NCSC Maps State Court Structures

From jurisdiction to jurisdiction, courts are not named consistently. A district court in one state might be a court of general jurisdiction; however, in another, a district court might be a court of limited jurisdiction. To help clear up any confusion, the National Center for State Courts has published charts of the structure of the state courts. - K

Free & Low Cost Legal Research Guide from Georgetown Law Library

The Georgetown University Law Library has published an online guide to free and low cost legal research. The Guide includes links to online resources for case law, constitutions, statutes and codes, legislative history, administrative regulations, and low-cost legal databases. Thanks to @shrivercenter for pointing this out. -M

Related Topics: A Family Law Blog

I wanted to share one of my favorite substantive law blogs, Related Topics, which should be of particular interest to those of you who practice family law. Apart from the fact that its author, Professor Julie Shapiro, explores wonderfully thorny issues that arise in the context of contemporary family law, her posts are extraordinarily thoughtful and beautifully written. Of her current theme, parenting, Professor Shapiro writes, "I hope to slowly develop a rich and layered understanding of what it means to be a parent, one that perhaps, some day, the law can learn from." -M

Tech Tip: Google Cheat Sheet

This wonderful two-page Google Cheat Sheet (PDF) lists Google services, query structures, tools, advanced search structures, special web searches and background information on Google. Each of the sections is color coded based on skill level. [Note that this cheat sheet was last updated in October 2006, but much of the information remains relevant and useful.] -M

IBA Launches Media Law and Freedom of Expression Website

The International Bar Association's Media Law Committee and Human Rights Institute today launched a new website for legal professionals that work to defend freedom of expression:

The goal of the site is to create a global community of media lawyers for mutual support and discussion. The website will act as a point of information sharing, capacity building and networking for those involved in media work all over the world. In particular, it will provide details of, and links to, local and global organisations working in the sector.

The website, which was developed in collaboration with Pro Bono Net,  is free to join and offers a variety of resources on media law and freedom of expression.  The full press release is available here.  -M

Legal Information Institute Launches Lawyer Directory Service

The Legal Information Institute (LII) at Cornell University School of Law just announced the launch of a new online lawyer directory in collaboration with Justia.com that allows lawyers to purchase a LII badge for their profile, with proceeds going to support the work of LII. More information about the Legal Information Institute is available here. -M

Free Friday: 2008 Federal Court Access Article Available Online

Clearinghouse Review has just published their yearly review of Supreme Court decisions concerning access to the federal courts online, including links to statutory authority and case law cited in the footnotes of the article. For those of you that subscribe to Clearinghouse Review, a print version of this article will also be published in the January-February 2009 issue. -M

Kaiser Updates Medicare and Medicaid Factsheets

The Kaiser Family Foundation recently updated their Medicare and Medicaid factsheets, which highlight who is eligible and what services are provided. Thanks to the Minnesota Legal Services Coalition for pointing this information out in their e-newsletter, JUST NEWS. - K

National Archive of Clinical Legal Education

Law School Clinics are an important partner in the delivery of legal services to the poor. Not only do they provide needed direct services to low-income individuals, they also offer meaningful opportunities for law students to engage in legal work and help to foster commitments by young lawyers to use their legal skills in the service of justice.

Recently I came across an incredible resource on clinical legal education called the National Archive of Clinical Legal Education, which is housed at the Columbus School of Law of the Catholic University of America. The site contains an extensive bibliography of articles and conference proceedings on clinical legal education, articles on the history of various clinics, and wonderful transcripts of oral histories by those involved in the development of clinical legal education, including Gary Bellow, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Philip Schrag. -M

Four Groups Create Online Resource to Provide Information for Disaster Victims

"A new Web site launched by four national legal organizations will help victims of disasters find valuable information and assistance to speed recovery from hurricanes, fires, floods or other disasters. The site is sponsored by the American Bar Association, Legal Services Corporation, National Legal Aid & Defender Association and Pro Bono Net." You can read the full press release here and visit the new site here. -M

Tour the Legal Web's New Sites

How Not to End Up on a Phisher's Hook

The last time that I wrote about Common Craft I suggested that they start creating materials on "evictions, name changes, and orders of protection." Perhaps they saw that post and took my advice, because their most recent video is about phishing, a topic that states are beginning to cover on their public legal information websites. For example, check out the LawHelp/NY site, which has an entire section on Internet Fraud and includes a feed from Internet Crime Complaint Center that lists the latest Internet scams. - K

Free Online Legal Help Now Available for Hurricane Ike Victims

Texas legal aid organizations and the Houston Bar Association are using LiveHelp to assist Texans affected by Hurricane Ike in obtaining free legal information:

The new service ... is available now and enables Hurricane Ike victims to conduct a live online chat with attorneys recruited by the Houston Volunteer Lawyers Program. Attorneys will answer questions and also refer those seeking help to legal resources specific to FEMA appeals and other disaster-related issues.

Funding for this project was provided by the Texas Access to Justice Foundation. The LiveHelp project was funded by the Legal Services Corporation and developed by Pro Bono Net. For more information about this project, read the full press release here. For more information about LiveHelp, contact Liz Keith (lkeith at probono.net). -M

IRS Offers Free Form 990 Webinar

To finish off my week of finance-related technology posts, I'm highlighting a free IRS webinar on November 4, 2008 to help nonprofits prepare to file the new Form 990. For those who need it, continuing education credits are available. You can register here. - K

Jureeka! Legal Research Firefox Add-on

Over the last few weeks I've been experimenting with a great new Firefox add-on called Jureeka!, which looks for legal citations on web pages and automatically turns them into hyperlinks that lead to a free version of the cited source. Developed by Michael Poulshock, the Jureeka! add-on presents a toolbar that lets users search for materials by citation, a button that looks for HTML versions of PDF pages, and (most recently) a feature that lets users create tags for legal sources found on the web. While not without its stray links (i.e. it treats the word "undocumented" as a "UN Document"), it's surprisingly accurate and very useful. You can download it directly from the Mozilla site here. -M

Legal References for your iPhone, iPod Touch, or Safari/Chrome Browser

For those of you who are equipped with iPhones, iPod Touch, or Safari/Chrome browsers, The Law Pod provides a great set of web apps for lawyers, including the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, Federal Rules of Evidence and U.S. Constitution. -M

State Bar of California and Public Interest Clearinghouse Launch Foreclosure Website

FindLaw Adds RSS Feeds for 23 Courts and 16 Practice Areas

I hope that all of you take a few minutes each week to follow Robert Ambrogi's LawSites blog, in which case you'll already know that FindLaw has introduced RSS feeds for 23 courts and 16 practice areas, including areas of interest to legal aid and public interest advocates such as immigration, family law, bankruptcy, constitutional law, environmental law, and labor and employment law. (Note: It's free, but a FindLaw account is required to view the cases from these feeds.) If you don't happen to follow LawSites, just add this RSS feed to your nearest reader. -M

Advocacy, Technology, and the Elections

Over the past few weeks, it has been amazing to watch how many organizations are using technology to advocate around the presidential elections, but a quick disclaimer before I start showing off examples: technola doesn't care if you vote for Obama, McCain, Mickey Mouse, or Ben, Kate's beagle, who runs on the platform of "More Meat!" We just want to show off a few examples of how technology is being used. So, now that we're done with that, we can get on to the fun stuff.

I know, I know. LSC-funded legal aid organizations are banned from any lobbying. But other non-profits aren't. In fact, Independent Sector has put together The Nonprofit Lobbying Guide to help non-profits figure out what they can and can't do.

And really, this post isn't about the elections and lobbying. It's about looking at how technology has been used to educate the public and move them to act. And don't even LSC-funded programs have to do that as a part of fundraising or community education or pro bono panel development? - K

National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty Launches Street Lawyer Wiki

Today the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty launched a new wiki called "Street Lawyer: Legal Tools for Economic Justice," which provides fact sheets, Q&A, statutory materials, litigation documents, model programs, policies, legislation, and articles. Topics include the criminalization of homelessness, domestic violence, hate crimes against homeless persons, education for homeless children, right to housing, voting rights and many others. -M

Recent Article on "Codelaw" By Gene Koo

I was just browsing an interesting new anthology, Rebooting America, which includes forty-four essays "brimming with the hopes of re-energizing, reorganizing, and reorienting our government for the Internet Age," and came across a name that should be familiar to some of you. Included in the volume is an essay by Gene Koo called "Creating Humane Codelaw," which pulls from his experience as a statewide website coordinator at the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, where he "became aware of a computer system called Beacon used by the MA Department of Transitional Assistance (aka "welfare") to distribute various benefits such as food stamps to Massachusetts residents." Gene goes on to describe how "software that executes law ("codelaw") presents a number of challenges to a democracy," and provide some ideas about how to ensure that codelaw "remains accountable to the people." Also included in the anthology are essays by Yochai Benkler, Newt Gingrich, Craig Newmark, Howard Rheingold, Clay Shirky, and David Weinberger. -M

The Hippest Law Librarian on the Block

I've always been a big fan of librarians. When I was younger, they would let me wander aimlessly through the stacks at Mayville State University, and they never said a word when I checked out a huge pile of books at the end of the day. However, I never necessarily thought of them as hip. (Note: I blame this on general librarian stereotypes, and the fact that to children of a certain age, adults are never hip.)

Last week at the Court Solutions Conference, I met a librarian that you couldn't help but call hip. Laureen Adams, from the Dougherty County Law Library, has taken the time to podcast so that the public has access to understandable legal information. Given the fact that she is the only staff person and is responsible for everything from watering the plants to reshelving books to helping patrons, this shows how dedicated she is and that she's thinking about how to incorporate new methods for providing the public with library services. Go, Laureen! - K

ILAO Launches Web Pages to Increase Pro Bono Work

Last month, Illinois Legal Aid Online, in partnership with the Public Interest Law Initiative's Pro Bono Initiative launched a series of web pages aimed at encouraging law students, federal government attorneys, retired attorneys, and paralegals to perform pro bono work. These pages contain content that is tailored to each of these groups, including a video showcasing other group members' pro bono experiences, articles that explain the issues around pro bono work, and a list of available volunteer opportunities. - K

LexisNexis Rule of Law Resource Center

As Kate mentioned in an earlier post, I spent most of last week in Johannesburg, South Africa on a site visit with the Southern Africa Litigation Center, which is using the Pro Bono Net template to support their work providing technical legal assistance and litigation support to advocates in the region who are working on media defense and freedom of expression issues. Having spent nearly two years in Southern Africa, as a student, teacher, legal advocate and law clerk at the Constitutional Court of South Africa, I was excited to reconnect with friends and colleagues and hear about the progress that has been made since I was last there.

Overall I was impressed by the advances made in the legal services sector (having one of the finest constitutions in the world helps). But one area that has yet to come into its own is meaningful access to legal information, which was of course part of the reason for my visit. To that end, I wanted to share a resource that has great potential for developing regions such as Southern Africa: the Rule of Law Resource Center. An initiative of LexisNexis, the Rule of Law Resource Center represents "the single largest, most credible and authoritative collection of Rule of Law resources on the internet."

Among the resources highlighted in the collection is an article by Daniel Poulin entitled "Open access to law in developing countries." Another is an article by Graham Greenleaf called "Legal Information Institutes and the Free Access to Law Movement." And finally, a blog post from Out of the Jungle, which defends the practice of open access archiving. What each of these resources highlights is the need for opening access to free legal information and developing sustainable models for the collection and dissemination of legal information, including a call for more attention to developing countries where the need is arguably the greatest.

I would encourage all of you to take some time to explore these resources. Not only do they provide a compelling framework for more meaningful access to legal information in other countries, they may also teach you something about your own work and how we might provide better access to free legal information in our community. -M

Social Networking Sites Help Vet Jurors

An interesting article by Julie Kay in The National Law Journal on how social networking sites, personal blogs and even letters to the editor have impacted the jury selection process. -M

SSA Launches Online Retirement Planning Tools

The Social Security Administration has recently launched a set of online retirement planning tools. These tools can help you or your clients estimate benefits, learn about Social Security programs, and apply for benefits.

Thanks to the LSNC Advocate Feed for pointing this out. - K

Law Professor Blogs Network

While Law Professor Blogs professes to be "a network of web logs ("blogs") designed from the ground-up to assist law professors in their scholarship and teaching," I've found them to be a great source of legal information for advocates of all stripes. Here are a few blogs in the network that may be of interest to legal aid and public interest advocates:

For the full list, visit lawprofessorblogs.com. -M

Who is Hosting This?

Ever visit a website and wonder "who is hosting this"? Check out Who is Hosting This?, a free website that tells you who hosts any domain (a Firefox bookmarklet and plugin are also available here). If instead you find yourself asking "who owns this"?, try dwhois.net, a simple, fast whois lookup service. -M

Free Criminal History Check Now Available

I happened upon another one of those sites that both scares and intrigues me: CriminalSearches.com. Now you can search for people's criminal histories for free. While a site like this could be helpful for legal aid attorneys who want to do a quick search on opposing parties, the New York Times points out how the site could actually prove to be a problem for both those leaving jail and attempting to start anew as well as the general public. Thanks to Doc Mara for pointing this out. - K

2008 EJC Materials Now Available Online

Thanks Bill Jones at the ABA, all of the session materials available for 2008 Equal Justice Conference are now online. Materials from the last five years are archived here. Many of the technology related session materials for the 2008 Conference are also available on LSNTAP. Next year's conference is scheduled for May 14-16, 2009, in Orlando, Florida. -M

Berkman Center's Citizen Media Law Project Launches Legal Guide

The Citizen Media Law Project at the Berkman Center just launched a legal guide for citizen media creators. The CMLP guide covers a range of legal issues, including forming a business online, newsgathering and privacy, intellectual property and risks associated with publishing online. The site also has an nice search feature and a state map that allows you to filter content for your state. -M [Thanks, Allison.]

Commissioners Close Self-Help Center in San Antonio

Bexar County self-represented litigants will now have one less place to turn when looking for legal information to help them represent themselves. On Tuesday, July 22, 2008, the County Commissioners voted to close the county self-help center, bowing to pressure from opponents that included many private attorneys and judges. The whole story is available from the San Antonio Express-News, which has a second article here,  as well as op-eds for and against the center.

And a note for self-represented litigants from Texas who end up reading this article while searching the Internet for legal information, check out TexasLawHelp.org, which provides legal information and referrals. - K

Today's Special? A Smorgasbord!

I've been collecting lots of little bits and pieces of information with the hope of turning them into full blog posts, but I haven't. So today, instead of depriving you of these valuable tidbits any longer, I'm throwing open the doors and inviting you to enjoy the smorgasbord.

Ohio Judges See More Do-It-Yourself Divorces and System Slowdown

An interesting AP article on the rise in use of downloadable divorce/dissolution forms and how Ohio courts are coping with large increases in self-represented litigants. -M

LSNC Launches "Findability Project"

From Brian Lawlor, Regional Counsel at LSNC:

Legal Services of Northern California has launched the Findability Project, a TIG-funded initiative to demonstrate how a Google Search Appliance, integrated with a SharePoint Server, can be used as a core technology for implementing enterprise-level search, and as the basic building block of an organization-wide knowledge-content system.

To keep up-to-date with the project be sure to subscribe to the RSS feed here. For more background, go here. We'll be following this project closely, and look forward to hearing from others who are implementing internal knowledge management and content sharing platforms at their organizations. (For example, using a wiki to share documents with a funder prior to a site visit.) -M

The Law Goes Open Source

A nice article on Forbes.com about the growth of "open source" case law:

Working in the open-sourcers' favor is the fact that what lawyers do for a living is quite similar to what Google's software algorithms do with Web sites. Lawyers prepare cases by looking through old court decisions to find arguments that will help their cause. Then they rank those cases according to a well-established hierarchy. Decisions that have been cited frequently by other judges are considered more reliable than ones that nobody cites. Appeals courts rank higher than trial courts. Recent decisions trump old, stale ones. Google's servers use similar logic, ranking Web sites according to how many other sites link to them and how lofty the referring sites are in the ranking.

-M [Thanks, Claudia.]

New Website on Civil Right to Counsel

From the Shriver Center:

Advocates who are pursuing a right to counsel in civil cases, as well as those who simply want information about the issue, now can access a new online source: the website of the National Coalition for a Civil Right to Counsel at www.civilrighttocounsel.org. The site, which is updated regularly, contains news of recent developments; descriptions of advocacy efforts and links to relevant documents; information about the justice gap, the coalition, and how to become involved in its work; the need for a right to counsel in civil cases; links to journal and newspaper articles; and much more.

-M

LexMonitor: Get Today's Top Legal Posts

If you want to keep up with the top legal blogs but can't imagine ever having the time to sift through everything out there, you should check out LexMonitor. This site is attempting to aggregate all of the law-related blogs and currently lists nearly 2,000 sources. You can look at the front page to check out the hot topics or do a search for a specific topic. A couple of other neat things about LexMonitor:

Disability Law Lowdown

Allison McDermott pointed out the Disability Law Lowdown Podcast to me. As its name suggests, this podcast brings you information about the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and other disability law topics. Check out the past episodes with full-text transcripts and remember to subscribe so that you don't miss new content as it is posted. - K

Free Friday: Books

So last week, we pointed out something that might have brought a few of you pain. But this week, I promise you, we've got something pleasant for the long summer days -- free books.

  • Google Books - Google gives you access to books, books, and more books. Books in the public domain or ones where the publishers have given permission are available for download in PDF and many other books have a free limited preview. This means that for free you can read all of Justice and the Poor by Reginald Heber Smith, check out the limited preview of Transforming Practices: Finding Joy and Satisfaction in the Legal Life by Steven Keeva, or, if you are into a little light reading, delve into Ivanhoe by Sir Walter Scott or An Introduction to the Theory of Numbers by Godfrey Harold Hardy and E.M. Wright.
  • BookMooch.com - This site lets you trade books that you own, have read, and don't want anymore for books that other people own, have read, and don't want anymore. This seems like a great site for compulsive book buyers who live in small studio apartments or those who are trying to cut back on the number of book buying binges they have. Caveat - This isn't completely free. You do have to pay for postage and handling for sending your books to others.
  • A History of Free and Open Source by Dr. Peter Salus - While I'm pointing out free books, I'd be remiss if I didn't point out this one. It's available for free from Groklaw, a website that reports on legal events related to free and open source software.

And if the sites listed above don't have that book that one special book that you need, perhaps one of these will.

Happy reading! - K

NLADA Partnering with ACS to Promote ACS ResearchLink

The American Constitution Society offers ACS ResearchLink, an innovative on-line resource for the legal community. NLADA is partnering with ACS to promote the continued development of ACS ResearchLink, so that this project can grow and leverage previously untapped resources to generate and share new ideas about important legal issues.

Find out more here. -M [Thanks, Allison.]

Pro Se Resources for Immigrants

Finding good pro se immigration resources on the web in languages other than English and Spanish is no easy task. Helping to address this need, the Vera Institute recently posted new translations of their Legal Orientation Program materials, which include information on asylum/withholding of removal, immigration fraud, bonds, voluntary departure, and T and U visas. There are also MP3 audio presentations of their Legal Rights Presentation in Arabic, French, Chinese and Vietnamese. Other online sources of pro se immigration materials (with Spanish translations) include the Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project and the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network websites. Many of the statewide legal aid websites also have pro se materials on immigration. One noteworthy example is LawHelp.org/NY. -M

Alltop Does Law

Alltop, a great source of aggregated online content, just added a law category that manages to include nearly every law blog in my RSS reader. Alltop's simple, effective design makes it very easy to navigate, and when you're finished with the law stuff you can head over to some of the other interesting categories, like Nonprofit and Gadgets. -M

Free Friday: Online Case Law

While free access to case law has been available for some time through sites like

  • The Public Library of Law: Developed by Fastcase, the Public Library of Law contains cases from the U.S. Supreme Court, Courts of Appeals and all 50 states (since 1997), as well as federal statutory law and codes from all states, regulations, court rules, and constitutions. Other features include RSS feeds for recent state and federal decisions, a user guide and web tutorials on finding cases and statutes.
  • AltLaw: A project of Columbia Law School's Program on Law and Technology and the Silicon Flatirons Program at the University of Colorado Law School, AltLaw features full text search of the last few decades of appellate and Supreme Court opinions. For most Circuits, coverage is limited to the last 40 to 50 years and West Reporter Citations are not available for the most recent cases. State law and district court cases are not currently available.
  • PreCYdent: PreCYdent emphasizes their search, which "ranks results by "authority", using mathematical techniques, such as eigenvector centrality, similar to those used by advanced Web search engines, as well as proprietary techniques we have developed that are specialized to the legal domain." The current version contains only U.S. Supreme Court and Court of Appeals cases. PreCYdent also allows you to register and upload legal documents.

Other great resources for online legal research with a poverty law focus include LSNC's Legal Research Tools and Legal Research on the Internet, a resource by the Shriver Center. -M

2008 Equal Justice Conference Tech Sessions

Kate and I will be participating in a few sessions at the Equal Justice Conference in Minneapolis next week. If you're planning to attend, we'd love to have you join us.

  • Tuesday, May 6th
    Distance services/technology (2:30pm-3:30pm; Presentation at Self Represented Litigants Pre-Conference)
    Presenters: Katrina Zabinski, Glenn Rawdon, Judy Meadows and Kate Bladow
  • Thursday, May 8th
    Using Technology to Advance Your Mission: Challenges and Opportunities for the Up-to-Date Legal Aid Law Firm (2:00pm-3:30pm)
    Presenters: Kate Bladow, Kathleen Brockel, Rachel Medina and Alison Paul

    Using Technology to Provide Technical Legal Assistance at the State and National Level (3:45pm-5:15pm)
    Presenters: Matthew Burnett and Michael Monahan

There are a number of other great sessions on statewide websites, document assembly and legal aid technology initiatives, so be sure to check out the full agenda. If you won't be at EJC, just tune in to technola next week, where Kate and I will be blogging from the conference. -M

Immigration Advocates Network Launches New Site

You may have noticed that Matthew was pretty quiet last week. Fear not. He's still as dedicated to blogging as ever. His day job was just a bit busier than normal--the Immigration Advocates Network web site launched.

The launch of this site is a huge step toward building a national network of service providers, advocates, and organizers who work on behalf of immigrants' rights. The web site allows members to connect with each other, receive up-to-date information and trainings, and share resources with others. This site will help each organization serve its members and will also help to strengthen the overall immigrants' rights movement. And Matthew's been a key person in getting this site off the ground. Yea, Matthew! - K