Coming Soon!
Each month the Law Library adds new books to our collection. Here is a selection of titles added in the last month. You'll find them on the New Book display by the front desk of the Boley Law Library, or shelved in their proper spot.
Click on the titles to see if they are available. Come to the library and check them out or, literally, come check them out of the library. Faculty, send us your requests and we'll have them in your inbox the next day.
Covid-19 Public Health Laws: A Legal Research Guide
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Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, several state legislatures, state and federal courts have created legislation or regulations or taken judicial or administrative actions that likely have far-reaching effects on public health policy. According to the Center for Public Health Law Research, since January 1, 2021, a number of states have enacted laws addressing authority to respond to public health emergencies including laws placing limits on the authority of a governor, state health official, or local health official regarding emergency orders; reallocation of authority from a governor, state health official, or local health official regarding emergency responses; limits on the application of federal law related to a public health emergency; expansions or limitations on the use of specific pandemic-related public health measures such as preemption of local public health emergency measures. This research guide offers one of the first comprehensive analysis of 51 jurisdictions' (including the District of Columbia) bills enacted during the pandemic and their effects on public health policy and practice. It provides comparative data relative to each state's response to COVID-19 pandemic by identifying and contrasting laws that limit and expand public health authority. The guide proceeds as follows. Because the federal government played such a big role in addressing the pandemic, part I begins by addressing the federal actions, including some of the key Supreme Court cases that addressed challenges to the pandemic restrictions. This part notes that the federal actions presented a mixed bag for public health law, that is federal officials were given broad powers to respond to the pandemic in some instances, while in others, the powers were severely restricted by the courts. Part II, the crux of the guide, provides a comprehensive analysis of laws that were enacted in the fifty states (and the District of Columbia) from the advent of the pandemic in 2019 to 2022, when most restrictions were lifted. These laws either expanded or limited public health authority. The section then discusses the implications for public health policy for these laws, noting that many of them tended to expand the scope of practice of healthcare workers such as allowing pharmacists, dentists and technicians to administer vaccines. However, the section avers that despite these seemingly positive strides for public health law, COVID-19 also spawned monsters in its wake. As the pandemic wore on, resentment to the mandates and the politicization of the pandemic triggered backlash to the broader public health system and to government intervention. The guide concludes in part III by noting that the legislative roll-back of statutory powers fundamental to effective public-health emergency response have wounded public health law in the sense that they are likely to hobble many public health officials' abilities to prevent and respond to future health threats.
ABA Standards and Rules of Procedure for Approval of Law schools 2024-2025
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The ABA standards and rules of procedure for approval of law schools are promulgated by the Council of the ABA Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar and concurred in by the ABA House of Delegates.
Law and Legal Research: A Basic Guide
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Our guide explains the legal system, legal research, and legal bibliography, with discussion of special topics in legal research.
Lawyers and Justice
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This book was donated to Boley Law Library by Lewis & Clark Law School Professor of Law Emerita Amy Bushaw. Reproduces the lithographs created by nineteenth-century French cariactaturist Honoré Daumier to parody the language, morals, and courtroom antics of lawyers. Captions in French and English.