LibTour

Darla JacksonArchive

Apr 19

AM JUR Trials

Posted in Audio, Darla Jackson, Posts       Comments Off on AM JUR Trials

This LibTour on AM JUR Trials, which you can download here, was written by Darla Jackson. Darla is the Associate Director of the Law Library at Oklahoma City University School of Law.

LibTour Poster:

Print the PDF handout and post it close to your library’s collection. Students can scan the QR code to hear the audio file instantly on their smart phones.

Want to customize? LibTours are licensed under Creative Commons. Find out how else you can use LibTours?

Transcript:

This CALI LibTour covers AM JUR Trials. Published by West, a Thomson Reuters business, American Jurisprudence Trials (commonly referred to as AM JUR Trials) has traditionally been a treatise on trial practice.  West has expanded the treatise to include other dispute resolution forums, such as mediation and arbitration. 

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Mar 08

Uniform Laws and Model Acts

Posted in Audio, Darla Jackson, Posts       Comments Off on Uniform Laws and Model Acts

Libtour: Uniform Laws and Model Acts QR CodeThis LibTour on uniform laws and model acts, which you can download here, was written by Darla Jackson. Darla is the Associate Director of the Law Library at Oklahoma City University School of Law.

LibTour Poster:

Librarians and legal writing professors:  Download the pre-made, letter-sized LibTour poster. Print the PDF, and post it close to your library’s collection. Students can scan the QR code to hear the audio file instantly on their smart phones.

What Else Can I Do With This?:

We offer LibTour materials to you under this Creative Commons license. It means those of you at schools and libraries – including law firm and public libraries – can use LibTour about however you want. Just give credit to CALI and don’t turn around and sell our work.

But, change it around completely, post it on your own site, work it into your library tours, paste all the QR codes onto one handout…whatever you want. Just have fun, be creative, share and let us know what you’re doing with them!

Transcript:

You are trying to interpret a state statute.  The language of the statute seems ambiguous and no courts in your jurisdiction have interpreted the statute.

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