The document announces the relaunch of several Oxford University Press law products and databases on July 24th, including Oxford Competition Law, Oxford Constitutions of the World, Oxford Public International Law, Oxford Reports on International Law, Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law, Oxford Scholarly Authorities on International Law, and Investment Claims. These products provide expert analysis, commentary, case reports, and materials on competition law, constitutions from around the world, public international law, and international investment arbitration claims.
This document provides guidance and advice for undertaking a dissertation. It discusses the purposes of doing a dissertation, which include developing personal specialism and exploring a topic in-depth. Key skills involved are critically analyzing information, decision-making, and summarizing findings. The processes involved are planning, literature review, research, writing, and referencing. Tips are provided for evaluating sources and conducting an effective literature review. Useful resources discussed include library databases, research repositories, bibliographic management software, and primary legal resources.
This document provides an overview of print and electronic resources for researching EU law available at Leeds Beckett University Library. It outlines key print materials such as books and journals located in the law collection. Electronic resources include ebooks, databases like EUR-Lex and Westlaw for legislation, cases and journal articles. The document recommends databases for specific EU law topics and accessing materials from other university libraries through the SCONUL scheme. Contact details are provided for any additional questions.
The document describes the Foreign and International Law Resources Database (FILRD) from HeinOnline. FILRD provides access to over 1,000,000 pages and 1,800 volumes of international law publications in fully searchable PDF format. It covers publications from international organizations, international tribunals, foreign law digests, and other significant works. FILRD aims to provide an affordable and comprehensive online collection for international law research that was previously difficult to access across multiple print sources.
Legal Research Free and Fast! - Web 2.0 SourcesConnie Crosby
I was a panelist in the session Legal Research Free and Fast! at the Canadian Association of Law Libraries/Michigan Association of Law Libraries joint conference CALL/ACBD/MichALL 2010 in Windsor, ON, Canada, on May 11, 2010.
The document discusses Maori language concepts including weather words, the prefix "kai", and waiata songs. It provides examples of words using "kai" like kaihikoi (walker), kaioma, and kaituhituhi. It includes the lyrics and instructions for two waiata songs. It also mentions a language challenge involving guessing one's location and providing a phone number to call for the answer.
This document contains two tests assessing knowledge of the present continuous tense. The pre-test contains 10 multiple choice questions testing use of "be" verbs like "is" and "are" in sentences describing actions happening now. The post-test provides 15 sentences for the test-taker to fill in the blank with the correct present participle form of the verb like "listening" or "running".
This document contains 3 passages about love and relationships. The first passage expresses a desire to spend every day with a loved one. The second thanks a friend for their support and comfort. The third discusses how meeting the wrong people helps one appreciate finding the right person.
This document provides guidance and advice for undertaking a dissertation. It discusses the purposes of doing a dissertation, which include developing personal specialism and exploring a topic in-depth. Key skills involved are critically analyzing information, decision-making, and summarizing findings. The processes involved are planning, literature review, research, writing, and referencing. Tips are provided for evaluating sources and conducting an effective literature review. Useful resources discussed include library databases, research repositories, bibliographic management software, and primary legal resources.
This document provides an overview of print and electronic resources for researching EU law available at Leeds Beckett University Library. It outlines key print materials such as books and journals located in the law collection. Electronic resources include ebooks, databases like EUR-Lex and Westlaw for legislation, cases and journal articles. The document recommends databases for specific EU law topics and accessing materials from other university libraries through the SCONUL scheme. Contact details are provided for any additional questions.
The document describes the Foreign and International Law Resources Database (FILRD) from HeinOnline. FILRD provides access to over 1,000,000 pages and 1,800 volumes of international law publications in fully searchable PDF format. It covers publications from international organizations, international tribunals, foreign law digests, and other significant works. FILRD aims to provide an affordable and comprehensive online collection for international law research that was previously difficult to access across multiple print sources.
Legal Research Free and Fast! - Web 2.0 SourcesConnie Crosby
I was a panelist in the session Legal Research Free and Fast! at the Canadian Association of Law Libraries/Michigan Association of Law Libraries joint conference CALL/ACBD/MichALL 2010 in Windsor, ON, Canada, on May 11, 2010.
The document discusses Maori language concepts including weather words, the prefix "kai", and waiata songs. It provides examples of words using "kai" like kaihikoi (walker), kaioma, and kaituhituhi. It includes the lyrics and instructions for two waiata songs. It also mentions a language challenge involving guessing one's location and providing a phone number to call for the answer.
This document contains two tests assessing knowledge of the present continuous tense. The pre-test contains 10 multiple choice questions testing use of "be" verbs like "is" and "are" in sentences describing actions happening now. The post-test provides 15 sentences for the test-taker to fill in the blank with the correct present participle form of the verb like "listening" or "running".
This document contains 3 passages about love and relationships. The first passage expresses a desire to spend every day with a loved one. The second thanks a friend for their support and comfort. The third discusses how meeting the wrong people helps one appreciate finding the right person.
This document contains a lesson on learning new Maori words using prefixes like "Kai", examples of words, a waiata or song, a challenge to identify a location, and announcements about house points and collecting scrap metal. It provides vocabulary and activities for a class to learn aspects of the Maori language.
This document contains a Māori language lesson plan covering various topics:
1) Expressing how you are feeling using the phrase "Kei te pehea koe?" and responses like "Kei te pai ahau" or "Kei te pouri ahau."
2) Learning parts of the body like "upoko, pakahiwi, hope, turi, waewae" in a waiata (song).
3) A challenge to answer where you are using the phrase "Kei hea au?".
4) House points updates for different groups.
This document discusses Sonian's contributions to open source projects like Fog, Elasticsearch, OpenStack Swift, and Chef. It also describes Sensu, an open source monitoring framework developed by Sonian. Sensu is designed for dynamic cloud environments using a messaging architecture with RabbitMQ and Redis. It allows reusing existing Nagios plugins and is intended to work with configuration management tools like Chef and Puppet. The document advocates adopting an open source community approach around Sensu to help test, develop plugins/modules, and provide documentation.
This document provides information and resources for Maori Language Week, including pronunciation practice of Maori words, videos, sentences to learn, and a call-in number to share why one's name is special. It also includes a waiata (song) to learn, announces house point standings from attendance, and marks the end of the document.
This document provides information in Te Reo Maori (the Maori language), including the Maori alphabet/syllables, a waiata (song), classroom directions, questions about classroom locations, riddles, and a table with house point scores. It teaches basic Maori words and concepts.
The document outlines the Green (R)evolution - Action Against Climate Change Global Program 2014-2020. It discusses the impacts of climate change such as rising global temperatures, effects on agriculture and displacement of populations. Solutions proposed include renewable energy, energy efficiency, and educating and inspiring mitigation and adaptation methods through a global certification program. The program is supported by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and aims to spread knowledge about climate change impacts and actions individuals can take.
1. The document provides pronunciation practice for Maori words like Papamoa, Taupo, and Tauranga.
2. It also includes a recap of the Maori months and a waiata (song) for family.
3. House point updates are given for attendance over three weeks, with the blue team currently leading.
This document is a daily newsletter in Te Reo Maori (the Maori language of New Zealand). It provides information on the date, weather, language lessons, songs, riddles and house points. It encourages learning Te Reo Maori through pronunciation practice, repeating phrases, and answering a riddle. It also announces birthdays for the week and updates scores for an inter-house competition.
This document contains notes from a Māori language lesson, including a poem about Tauranga Moana, a riddle asking who a student is based on physical features, and an announcement of house points standings with Purple house currently winning. It provides pronunciation practice of Māori vowels and words from a production, introduces a song sung by two students, and concludes with a goodbye message in Māori.
1) This document provides information from a daily school newsletter in te reo Maori, including the date, weather, songs, pronunciation practice of vowels, a riddle, house points update, and sign off.
2) The riddle poses clues about a female character - "No Rotorua ahau", "He nui aku ringaringa me aku waewae", "He pai ki ahau te mataa", "He wahine ahau" - and students are invited to call in with the answer.
3) House points standings are updated, with Purple house currently leading over Green, Red and Blue houses.
This document provides information and activities for Maori Language Week. It includes pronunciation practice of Maori words, a video introduction to Maori Language Week, sentences to practice introducing oneself in Maori, a challenge asking where one is located that can be answered by calling in, and a closing waiata or song. House points are also tracked for attendance at sessions over several weeks. The document promotes learning and participation in the Maori language.
This document contains a daily lesson plan for teaching Maori language. It includes lessons on asking how someone is feeling if sick, matching phrases to pictures, singing songs, and tracking house points. The lessons cover basic greetings, body parts, emotions, and competitions between student houses on attendance, scrap metal collection, and other activities.
This report summarizes the key findings of a survey of over 50,000 people in 26 countries regarding their news consumption habits. It finds that social media has become an increasingly important source of news, with over half of respondents using it for news weekly. Smartphone use for news is up sharply while computer use is down. Most people remain reluctant to pay for online news. Ad-blocking continues to rise and poses challenges for publishers' revenue. Television remains important for older groups but its use is declining overall, particularly among younger people.
The summary is in 3 sentences:
The document provides information from a weekly newsletter in te reo Maori including vocabulary words, months of the year in te reo, polite language phrases, a riddle, and a song. It also includes house point totals from the second term for attendance and a cross country event. The document teaches reo Maori words and concepts through examples, practice exercises, and recaps of language lessons.
1. The document contains Te Reo Maori text with questions about weather, body parts that can be sore, songs, riddles, and house point totals from a school.
2. It asks the reader to match a weather description to a picture, lists responses to the question "He aha te mate?" (What's the matter?), presents a waiata (song) and its lyrics, provides a riddle "Kei hea au?" (Where am I?) and lists house point totals for different activities by color group.
3. The document appears to be materials from a Te Reo Maori class covering weather, body parts, songs, riddles and a house point system at school.
Kate was working in London when she met her boyfriend Peter.
She lived in Paris where she started a university career.
I was driving to work when I had an accident.
We were running in the park when it started to rain.
The students were throwing paper balls when the teacher arrived.
The document provides an overview of the Indian power sector including its background, major challenges, mergers and acquisitions, and performance of key industry players. Some key points:
- India ranks 4th in energy consumption but 5th in generation capacity. The sector faces challenges like coal shortages, environmental clearances, and transmission/distribution issues.
- Major M&A deals include NTPC acquiring Nabinagar Power and FPM Power Holdings acquiring GMR Energy.
- Performance is analyzed using valuation multiples like EV/EBITDA and Price/Book Value. NTPC and NHPC have relatively lower multiples indicating undervaluation. Reliance Power and Torrent Power have higher multiples.
-
Software Libre is a free and open-source software movement that promotes the free redistribution and modification of software source code. The movement advocates the universal freedom to use, study, share, and improve any aspect of software. Software Libre promotes the idea that restrictions imposed by copyright law should not limit these essential freedoms.
This document contains information about the weather, Maori names of students at a school, Maori street names in a town, a riddle asking where someone is located, a family song, and an announcement about starting to collect scrap metal for house points at the school. It closes with "good bye".
This document provides an overview and update on Oxford University Press' various law databases and resources. It describes Oxford Constitutional Law which covers constitutions from around the world through detailed commentaries and supplementary materials. It also outlines Oxford International Arbitration/Investment Claims which includes bilateral investment treaties, arbitration cases, and commentary. The document notes recent additions and future developments across various modules within Oxford Public International Law and the Oxford Legal Research Library. It concludes by highlighting platform access options and the Oxford Law Citator tool.
This document provides guidance on researching international law sources for the Jessup Moot competition. It outlines primary sources like UN documents, treaties, and decisions from the International Court of Justice. It also discusses researching secondary sources such as journal articles, books, and legal databases. Tips are provided on how to effectively search these sources and develop a strong search strategy.
This document contains a lesson on learning new Maori words using prefixes like "Kai", examples of words, a waiata or song, a challenge to identify a location, and announcements about house points and collecting scrap metal. It provides vocabulary and activities for a class to learn aspects of the Maori language.
This document contains a Māori language lesson plan covering various topics:
1) Expressing how you are feeling using the phrase "Kei te pehea koe?" and responses like "Kei te pai ahau" or "Kei te pouri ahau."
2) Learning parts of the body like "upoko, pakahiwi, hope, turi, waewae" in a waiata (song).
3) A challenge to answer where you are using the phrase "Kei hea au?".
4) House points updates for different groups.
This document discusses Sonian's contributions to open source projects like Fog, Elasticsearch, OpenStack Swift, and Chef. It also describes Sensu, an open source monitoring framework developed by Sonian. Sensu is designed for dynamic cloud environments using a messaging architecture with RabbitMQ and Redis. It allows reusing existing Nagios plugins and is intended to work with configuration management tools like Chef and Puppet. The document advocates adopting an open source community approach around Sensu to help test, develop plugins/modules, and provide documentation.
This document provides information and resources for Maori Language Week, including pronunciation practice of Maori words, videos, sentences to learn, and a call-in number to share why one's name is special. It also includes a waiata (song) to learn, announces house point standings from attendance, and marks the end of the document.
This document provides information in Te Reo Maori (the Maori language), including the Maori alphabet/syllables, a waiata (song), classroom directions, questions about classroom locations, riddles, and a table with house point scores. It teaches basic Maori words and concepts.
The document outlines the Green (R)evolution - Action Against Climate Change Global Program 2014-2020. It discusses the impacts of climate change such as rising global temperatures, effects on agriculture and displacement of populations. Solutions proposed include renewable energy, energy efficiency, and educating and inspiring mitigation and adaptation methods through a global certification program. The program is supported by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and aims to spread knowledge about climate change impacts and actions individuals can take.
1. The document provides pronunciation practice for Maori words like Papamoa, Taupo, and Tauranga.
2. It also includes a recap of the Maori months and a waiata (song) for family.
3. House point updates are given for attendance over three weeks, with the blue team currently leading.
This document is a daily newsletter in Te Reo Maori (the Maori language of New Zealand). It provides information on the date, weather, language lessons, songs, riddles and house points. It encourages learning Te Reo Maori through pronunciation practice, repeating phrases, and answering a riddle. It also announces birthdays for the week and updates scores for an inter-house competition.
This document contains notes from a Māori language lesson, including a poem about Tauranga Moana, a riddle asking who a student is based on physical features, and an announcement of house points standings with Purple house currently winning. It provides pronunciation practice of Māori vowels and words from a production, introduces a song sung by two students, and concludes with a goodbye message in Māori.
1) This document provides information from a daily school newsletter in te reo Maori, including the date, weather, songs, pronunciation practice of vowels, a riddle, house points update, and sign off.
2) The riddle poses clues about a female character - "No Rotorua ahau", "He nui aku ringaringa me aku waewae", "He pai ki ahau te mataa", "He wahine ahau" - and students are invited to call in with the answer.
3) House points standings are updated, with Purple house currently leading over Green, Red and Blue houses.
This document provides information and activities for Maori Language Week. It includes pronunciation practice of Maori words, a video introduction to Maori Language Week, sentences to practice introducing oneself in Maori, a challenge asking where one is located that can be answered by calling in, and a closing waiata or song. House points are also tracked for attendance at sessions over several weeks. The document promotes learning and participation in the Maori language.
This document contains a daily lesson plan for teaching Maori language. It includes lessons on asking how someone is feeling if sick, matching phrases to pictures, singing songs, and tracking house points. The lessons cover basic greetings, body parts, emotions, and competitions between student houses on attendance, scrap metal collection, and other activities.
This report summarizes the key findings of a survey of over 50,000 people in 26 countries regarding their news consumption habits. It finds that social media has become an increasingly important source of news, with over half of respondents using it for news weekly. Smartphone use for news is up sharply while computer use is down. Most people remain reluctant to pay for online news. Ad-blocking continues to rise and poses challenges for publishers' revenue. Television remains important for older groups but its use is declining overall, particularly among younger people.
The summary is in 3 sentences:
The document provides information from a weekly newsletter in te reo Maori including vocabulary words, months of the year in te reo, polite language phrases, a riddle, and a song. It also includes house point totals from the second term for attendance and a cross country event. The document teaches reo Maori words and concepts through examples, practice exercises, and recaps of language lessons.
1. The document contains Te Reo Maori text with questions about weather, body parts that can be sore, songs, riddles, and house point totals from a school.
2. It asks the reader to match a weather description to a picture, lists responses to the question "He aha te mate?" (What's the matter?), presents a waiata (song) and its lyrics, provides a riddle "Kei hea au?" (Where am I?) and lists house point totals for different activities by color group.
3. The document appears to be materials from a Te Reo Maori class covering weather, body parts, songs, riddles and a house point system at school.
Kate was working in London when she met her boyfriend Peter.
She lived in Paris where she started a university career.
I was driving to work when I had an accident.
We were running in the park when it started to rain.
The students were throwing paper balls when the teacher arrived.
The document provides an overview of the Indian power sector including its background, major challenges, mergers and acquisitions, and performance of key industry players. Some key points:
- India ranks 4th in energy consumption but 5th in generation capacity. The sector faces challenges like coal shortages, environmental clearances, and transmission/distribution issues.
- Major M&A deals include NTPC acquiring Nabinagar Power and FPM Power Holdings acquiring GMR Energy.
- Performance is analyzed using valuation multiples like EV/EBITDA and Price/Book Value. NTPC and NHPC have relatively lower multiples indicating undervaluation. Reliance Power and Torrent Power have higher multiples.
-
Software Libre is a free and open-source software movement that promotes the free redistribution and modification of software source code. The movement advocates the universal freedom to use, study, share, and improve any aspect of software. Software Libre promotes the idea that restrictions imposed by copyright law should not limit these essential freedoms.
This document contains information about the weather, Maori names of students at a school, Maori street names in a town, a riddle asking where someone is located, a family song, and an announcement about starting to collect scrap metal for house points at the school. It closes with "good bye".
This document provides an overview and update on Oxford University Press' various law databases and resources. It describes Oxford Constitutional Law which covers constitutions from around the world through detailed commentaries and supplementary materials. It also outlines Oxford International Arbitration/Investment Claims which includes bilateral investment treaties, arbitration cases, and commentary. The document notes recent additions and future developments across various modules within Oxford Public International Law and the Oxford Legal Research Library. It concludes by highlighting platform access options and the Oxford Law Citator tool.
This document provides guidance on researching international law sources for the Jessup Moot competition. It outlines primary sources like UN documents, treaties, and decisions from the International Court of Justice. It also discusses researching secondary sources such as journal articles, books, and legal databases. Tips are provided on how to effectively search these sources and develop a strong search strategy.
Oxford Law Products provides several online legal research platforms and resources. Their OUP Law platform has a flexible content framework that can handle various content types and supports easy publication and updating. Oxford Constitutional Law covers constitutions from around the world with expert commentary and supplementary materials. Investment Claims provides research on international investment law including bilateral investment treaties and case reports. Oxford Public International Law includes five modules covering various areas of public international law. The Oxford Legal Research Library brings together OUP's legal titles and will include additional practice areas. Platforms provide access to these resources with authentication and include usage stats, MARC records, and links between materials.
What Are The Different Primary And Secondary Sources Of Law UK Research? - Ph...PhD Assistance
Legal research can be defined as the process by which Law-related Information is discovered and collected which in turn helps in making legal decisions. In a legal research, each phase has a course of action that starts with an examination of the facts of an issue and ends with the implementation and presentation of the investigation results (Steven M. Barkan et al., 2015). In the beginning, gaining expertise in legal research is to attain understanding of the types of materials that constitute "the law," and the connections between these resources. While investigating a legal issue, it is also appropriate to examine laws (legislative enactments), cases (judicial opinions), and/or statutory documents (regulations and decisions of administrative agencies). All these resources are considered as "primary sources." However, most researchers look for at least one additional resource, called "secondary sources," to assist their investigation or research. Mostly, sources used in Legal Research are Primary Sources and Secondary Sources.
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This document provides an overview of resources for researching human rights law, including general sources like research guides and encyclopedias, journal indexes, primary sources from the United Nations and law reports, and ways to search by region. It discusses starting with the institution that created a primary source and provides specific database and website recommendations for finding materials from the UN, Europe, Inter-America, and Africa. The document concludes by offering tips for keeping research up to date through RSS feeds, table of contents services, and alerts from legal databases.
This document provides an overview and guide to resources for researching international criminal law at La Trobe University. It outlines core legal texts from the International Criminal Court as well as databases like the Legal Tools Database and National Implementing Legislation Database. It also discusses secondary sources such as journal articles that can be accessed through databases, as well as the Oxford Public International Law database. Search techniques for different databases and resources are provided.
This document provides an overview of legal research sources available at the Durham University Library. It discusses effective search strategies for databases like Westlaw and Lexis, and sources for finding legislation, cases, and journals. The library catalog allows users to search for books and connect to e-resources. Other sources mentioned include the Law Commission, Hansard, newspapers, and Discover for searching across library collections. Help is available from the enquiries desk, online, or from the Academic Support Team leader Richard Pears.
This document provides information and resources for students participating in the VIS East Mooting Competition, including an overview of the competition problem, tips for mooting, and guides on how to research international arbitration law. It details several databases and sources for finding relevant case law, legislation, treaties, and secondary sources. Key databases mentioned include Kluwer Arbitration, Westlaw, LexisNexis, and various journal indexes. Tips are provided on effective search techniques within these resources.
The document provides an overview of legal research resources, including both print and electronic sources. It discusses legal publishing, key legal information portals and databases, how to guides, legislation sources, case law sources, and legal textbooks. Tips are provided on choosing the right information sources depending on one's research needs and questions.
The 5-step process for researching foreign and comparative law involves: 1) Understanding the legal system's structure; 2) Identifying the needed legal document; 3) Locating primary sources; 4) Finding the full text; and 5) Consulting secondary sources if needed. Key resources include the Foreign Law Guide, WorldLII, GLIN, DoingBusiness, and subject specific compilations. The Hague Conference and State Department provide guidance on international legal cooperation and foreign litigation procedures.
This document discusses legal writing and citation styles. It covers topics such as footnotes, Latin citation terms like ibid and supra, the OSCOLA and Bluebook citation styles, plagiarism, and creating a bibliography. Legal writing involves analyzing facts, presenting arguments in documents like briefs and memos, and may include predictive memos or writing for publications. Proper citation of sources is important to avoid plagiarism when writing.
This document provides an overview of resources for studying law at Middlesex University. It discusses finding books, cases, legislation, and journal articles in the library and online. It also covers reading lists, understanding catalog records, legal citations, and databases for current research. The goal is to help students effectively use the various sources needed to research law topics.
Introduction to the different types of legal literature - Knowledge BaseUofGKnowledgebase
This document provides an introduction to different types of legal literature that law students may encounter, including legislation, cases, institutional writings, journal articles, books, and parliamentary materials. It discusses finding each type in print or online and gives brief overviews and examples of each type. Legislation is described as coming from the UK Parliament, Scottish Parliament, and European Union. Cases are discussed in terms of print law reports, official versus unofficial reports, and online databases. Institutional writings are highlighted as formal sources of Scots law.
This document provides information about Brill, a scholarly publisher founded in 1683 in Leiden, Netherlands. It focuses on Brill's key facts, products, and subject areas. Brill's products include journals, e-books, reference works, primary sources, and databases covering areas like Asian Studies, International Law, European History, Language and Linguistics, and Middle East and Islamic Studies. Many of Brill's resources have been published for decades and are continually updated online.
The document summarizes several online resources provided by Oxford University Press (OUP) that are available for libraries. It describes University Press Scholarship Online which provides access to books from various university presses; Oxford Handbooks Online which offers scholarly reviews on key topics; and Oxford Bibliographies Online which provides authoritative research guides on various subjects. It also outlines other resources such as Oxford Reference, Oxford Islamic Studies Online, Oxford Medicine Online, and the Oxford English Dictionary Online.
A Digitalization Partnership: Sharing human and material resources by Larissa...dduin
This document summarizes key points about intellectual property rights (IPR) considerations for a digitalization partnership between three Belgian institutions - NBGB, RBINS, and RMCA - called Be-TAF. It discusses IPR best practices for openly licensing content, managing copyright risks for different date ranges of publications, and models for rights agreements. It also examines some controversial edge cases and considers scientists' views that publicly funded research results should be widely disseminated with proper citation. The conclusion is that while efforts will be made to avoid infringing content, some risk cannot be eliminated and a notice-and-takedown policy should be implemented to manage any issues.
This document provides information about electronic legal resources available at the library for LLM students. It discusses accessing cases and journal articles through databases like Westlaw, Lexis Library, and HeinOnline. It covers using legal citations and how to search for cases and journal articles. Tips are provided for effective search techniques using terms, connectors, and proximity searching to narrow results. The document also discusses tracking current developments through current awareness tools on Westlaw and Lexis Library.
This document provides an overview of the key sources of public international law, including treaties, custom, general principles of law, and judicial decisions. It then lists important texts and references on international law, and provides detailed guidance on finding information on treaties and customary international law, emphasizing treaty databases, digests of state practice, and official publications. Resources discussed include UNTreaty, HeinOnline, the American Society of International Law website, and the U.S. State Department website.
This document provides an overview of the key sources of public international law, including treaties, custom, general principles of law, and judicial decisions. It then lists important texts and references on international law, and provides detailed guidance on finding information on treaties and customary international law, emphasizing treaty databases, digests of state practice, and official publications. Resources discussed include UNTreaty, HeinOnline, the American Society of International Law website, and the U.S. State Department website.
This document provides an overview of the key sources of public international law, including treaties, custom, general principles of law, and judicial decisions. It then lists important texts and references on international law, and provides detailed guidance on finding information on treaties and customary international law, emphasizing treaty databases, digests of state practice, international court decisions, and other sources of evidence of customary international law. Resources for locating travaux préparatoires and researching specific countries' practice are also outlined.
Genocide in International Criminal Law.pptxMasoudZamani13
Excited to share insights from my recent presentation on genocide! 💡 In light of ongoing debates, it's crucial to delve into the nuances of this grave crime.
सुप्रीम कोर्ट ने यह भी माना था कि मजिस्ट्रेट का यह कर्तव्य है कि वह सुनिश्चित करे कि अधिकारी पीएमएलए के तहत निर्धारित प्रक्रिया के साथ-साथ संवैधानिक सुरक्षा उपायों का भी उचित रूप से पालन करें।
Safeguarding Against Financial Crime: AML Compliance Regulations DemystifiedPROF. PAUL ALLIEU KAMARA
To ensure the integrity of financial systems and combat illicit financial activities, understanding AML (Anti-Money Laundering) compliance regulations is crucial for financial institutions and businesses. AML compliance regulations are designed to prevent money laundering and the financing of terrorist activities by imposing specific requirements on financial institutions, including customer due diligence, monitoring, and reporting of suspicious activities (GitHub Docs).
Integrating Advocacy and Legal Tactics to Tackle Online Consumer Complaintsseoglobal20
Our company bridges the gap between registered users and experienced advocates, offering a user-friendly online platform for seamless interaction. This platform empowers users to voice their grievances, particularly regarding online consumer issues. We streamline support by utilizing our team of expert advocates to provide consultancy services and initiate appropriate legal actions.
Our Online Consumer Legal Forum offers comprehensive guidance to individuals and businesses facing consumer complaints. With a dedicated team, round-the-clock support, and efficient complaint management, we are the preferred solution for addressing consumer grievances.
Our intuitive online interface allows individuals to register complaints, seek legal advice, and pursue justice conveniently. Users can submit complaints via mobile devices and send legal notices to companies directly through our portal.
Sangyun Lee, 'Why Korea's Merger Control Occasionally Fails: A Public Choice ...Sangyun Lee
Presentation slides for a session held on June 4, 2024, at Kyoto University. This presentation is based on the presenter’s recent paper, coauthored with Hwang Lee, Professor, Korea University, with the same title, published in the Journal of Business Administration & Law, Volume 34, No. 2 (April 2024). The paper, written in Korean, is available at <https://shorturl.at/GCWcI>.
The Future of Criminal Defense Lawyer in India.pdfveteranlegal
https://veteranlegal.in/defense-lawyer-in-india/ | Criminal defense Lawyer in India has always been a vital aspect of the country's legal system. As defenders of justice, criminal Defense Lawyer play a critical role in ensuring that individuals accused of crimes receive a fair trial and that their constitutional rights are protected. As India evolves socially, economically, and technologically, the role and future of criminal Defense Lawyer are also undergoing significant changes. This comprehensive blog explores the current landscape, challenges, technological advancements, and prospects for criminal Defense Lawyer in India.
2. Relaunching July 24thOxford Competition Law
Oxford Competition Law provides a suite of fully interlinked competition analysis,
peer reviewed case reports and source materials
Combines world-renowned market-leading commentaries, national case reports
and analysis from EU member states
Key commentaries include;
• Bellamy & Child: European Community Law of Competition
• Faull & Nick pay: The EC Law of Competition
• Whish & Bailey: Competition Law
3. Relaunching July 24thOxford Competition Law
Professionals and students can
• Search and Browse Commentary, Cases and Materials
• Read Peer reviewed national case reports including a
detailed summary of the case, expert analysis and links to
the original document
5. Relaunching July 24th
What is Oxford Constitutions of the World?
The only resource to contain fully-translated English-language
versions of all of the world’s constitutions (both national & sub-
national). These constitutions are accompanied by:
• Historical Constitutions
• Individual commentaries
• Supplementary materials including:
foundational documents
historical constitutions
amendment acts/laws
Oxford Constitutions of
the World
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Oxford Public International
Law
Oxford Public International Law (OPIL) is a comprehensive, single location
providing integrated access across our international law services
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Oxford Public International
Law
What is Oxford Public International Law?
A comprehensive, single location providing integrated access
across our international law services. It contains:
• Oxford Reports on International Law
• Max Planck Encyclopaedia of Public International Law
• Oxford Scholarly Authorities on International Law
Each are ground-breaking online resources working to speed up
research and provide easy access to authoritative content, essential for
anyone working in international law
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What is Oxford Reports on International Law?
A database of case decisions on public international law from
international law courts, domestic courts, and tribunals, accompanied
by expert analysis and cross-case navigation via the Oxford Law
Citator.
Collected and edited by a team of experts from institutions across the
world, these case reports are enhanced with high-quality commentary,
headnotes, analysis, and English translations of non-English decisions.
Oxford Reports on
International Law
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ORIL is divided into five modules:
• Oxford Reports on International Law in Domestic Courts (ILDC)
• Oxford Reports on International Criminal Law (ICL)
• Oxford Reports on International Human Rights Law (IHRL)
• Oxford Reports on International Investment Claims (IIC)
• Oxford Reports on International Courts of General Jurisdiction*
*Module provided free-of-charge with any subscription to Oxford Reports on
International Law
Oxford Reports on
International Law
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Max Planck Encyclopedia of
Public International Law
The definitive reference work on public international law
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Max Planck Encyclopedia of
Public International Law
What is Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law?
A comprehensive online resource containing peer-reviewed articles on
every aspect of public international law.
• Written and edited by a team of over 800 scholars and practitioners.
• Published in partnership with the Max Planck Institute for
Comparative Public Law and International Law
• Updated throughout the year.
• Each of the articles selected for publication has been chosen to
reflect not only the history of public international law, but also
recent growth areas such as criminal law, human rights law,
economic law, and environmental law.
*Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law sits under the Oxford Public
International Law umbrella to allow cross-searching for mutual subscribers
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• Air law and law of outer space
• Diplomacy and consular relations
• History of international law
• Human Rights
• Immunities
• Individuals and non-state actors
• Int’l co-operation
• Int’l courts and tribunals
• Int’l criminal law
• Int’l economic law
• Int’l environment law
• Int’l humanitarian law
• Int’l law & Int’l relations
• Int’l organizations
• Int’l responsibilities
• Law of the sea
• Law of treaties
• Relationships between Int’l &
domestic law
• Settlements of disputes
• Sources, foundations and principles
of international law
• Statehood, jurisdiction of states,
organs of states
• Territory
• Theory of international law
• Use of force, war, peace and
neutrality
Max Planck Encyclopedia of
Public International Law
Key subjects covered:
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Oxford Reports on
International Law
The full scope of international case law - expertly analyzed and inter-linked
'A wonderful tool for studying or
keeping track of evolving
jurisprudence. Easy to search and
browse, it lives up to its billing as a
'single point of reference'...With
such rich content and good search
functionality, this is an impressive
database well worth the cost for
law libraries with specialized
collections in international or
comparative law...Highly
recommended'
- David Ettinger, Int’l Affairs and
Political Science Librarian, Gelman
Library, George Washington University
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Oxford Scholarly Authorities
on International Law
Oxford’s unrivalled reference works available online
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What is Oxford Scholarly Authorities on International Law?
Under the Oxford Public International Law umbrella, Oxford Scholarly
Authorities on International Law is the starting point for scholars and
practitioners working in public international law.
Includes the full-text online editions of market-leading reference works
and treaties published by Oxford University Press.
All titles include lists of cases and instruments, are fully searchable,
and are directly linked, via the Oxford Law Citator, to relevant case
reports and articles within all of Oxford University Press’s online law
products.
Oxford Scholarly Authorities
on International Law
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Key titles within the resource include:
• Oppenheim's International Law
• Ian Brownlie's Principles of Public International Law
• Rosalyn Higgins' Problems and Process
• Commentaries on UN Charter edited by Bruno Simma
• Statute of the ICJ edited by Andreas Zimmermann
• Torture Convention by Manfred Nowak
*New titles added to the resource twice a year
Oxford Scholarly Authorities
on International Law
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Faster, more effective research of investment arbitration disputes
'Investment Claims is an invaluable
resource for any practitioner or student
who needs to understand the burgeoning
jurisprudence of international investment
law. Not only does it facilitate a rapid
review of investment treaty awards, it
also enables in-depth research by
providing access to peer-reviewed award
analyses and important monographs in
the field.‘
- Romesh Weeramantry, Associate
Professor, School of Law, City University of Hong
Kong
Investment Claims
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Faster, more effective research of investment arbitration disputes
Investment Claims
What is Investment Claims?
A specialist service that provides access to a fully integrated suite of arbitration awards
and decisions, bilateral investment treaties, multilateral treaties, journal articles,
monographs, and arbitration laws. Investment Claims includes:
• Awards and decisions with full headnotes, including English translations of key
portions of non-English decisions, and peer-reviewed analysis
• Overviews of bilateral investment treaties for major jurisdictions
• A supplementary collection of journal articles and key monographs
Investment Claims is regularly updated with new content throughout the year, with all
new and updated awards and decisions announced on the homepage, and all other
content updates announced via customizable email alerts and RSS feeds.
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Faster, more effective research of investment arbitration disputes
Investment Claims
Investment Claims contains:
• BIC Codes
• Arbitration, mediation and alternative dispute resolution
• Settlement of international disputes
• International arbitration
• International courts and procedures
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Oxford Legal Research Library
Oxford Legal Research Library (OLRL) provides integrated access across
collections of key law titles in a variety of subject areas.
OLRL includes four collections:
International Commercial Arbitration
International Commercial Law
Financial and Banking Law, and
Private International Law.
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Oxford Legal Research Library - benefits
Brings key authorities out of the library and onto fee earner
desktops
Allows significant time saving in research and more confident
that the coverage has been discovered
Table of authorities connected to the Oxford Law Citator
providing an overarching reference resource for citations
within that area
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Oxford Legal Research Library - updates
• Option to provide online only supplementation and we intend to use this as
a way to keep update key copyrights between fully revised editions
Future development ideas
Insolvency Law
Intellectual Property and Patent Law
Data Protection & Privacy
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A Powerful Tool for Legal Research
“We have looked at user journeys and we have
set out what it is that people are trying to
accomplish at different stages with our online
resources and particularly how they interact
between primary materials and between
secondary materials or analytic works. The
Citator is designed to support the researcher at
the point of research, wherever they are in
their research journey…the path for onward
research is properly facilitated and that is
something that is intended to save the user
time and effort.”
- A n d y R e d m a n ,
E d i t o r i a l D i r e c t o r
Oxford Law Citator
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What is the Oxford Law Citator?
The Oxford Law Citator is a state-of-the-art navigation tool that provides users
with seamless research journeys – both between content from Oxford’s
acclaimed law online resources, and out to esteemed third-party websites.
A Powerful Tool for Legal Research
Oxford Law Citator
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How does the Oxford Law Citator facilitate
research?
• Enables users to extend their investigative capabilities with direct links
between all content
• Increases the efficiency of legal research by consolidating citation details and
opportunities to find new information into each unique record
• Provides quick access to the most relevant research – the original content’s
references, as well as material that references the original content
A Powerful Tool for Legal Research
Oxford Law Citator
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A Powerful Tool for Legal Research
Oxford Law Citator
How does a user move through the Oxford Law
Citator?
Rich document trails
In this example, a quick search for the
independence of Cyprus in the Max
Planck Encyclopedia of Public
International Law provides access to a
rich trail of linked documents that can
be explored with the Oxford Law
Citator – facilitating a quick and
efficient research journey.
Searching “the independence of Cyprus” in
the Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public
International Law
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A Powerful Tool for Legal Research
Oxford Law Citator
How does a user move through the Oxford Law
Citator?
Quick accessibility to other Oxford Law
Online services
If the full text is available through
another OUP service, clicking on the
relevant Citator link within the article
will take users straight to the
appropriate resource.
Elsewhere in the same Max Planck article
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A Powerful Tool for Legal Research
Oxford Law Citator
How does a user move through the Oxford Law
Citator?
Complete picture of research
The Citator provides an overview of
each resource so users can easily
determine the availability and location
of the desired information.
The Constitution of the Republic of Cyprus is
available in Oxford Constitutions of the World.
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A Powerful Tool for Legal Research
Oxford Law Citator
Quickly
view the
document
in an online
resource
from the
Citator
record
Easily
search and
expand the
document’s
Table of
Contents
Discover references
within the article as well
as references to the
article, and relevant
subject areas
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For further information
Tina Argyros
Sales Executive
Email: tina.argyros@oup.com
http://global.oup.com/online/law-online-resources
We are the market leaders of international law
Our products are grouped by subject or same discipline
Requirements for the Law product Framework
Flexible content and functional framework
Able to handle all relevant content types
Easy and frequent publication and updating
Rich set of links and references
Our products offer primary (cases) and secondary sources of information (books)
Peer reviewed national case reports including full-text judgements, analysis and key portions of original text (translated in English)
Bellamy & Child: European Community Law of Competition – includes online only updates
EU cases are mostly to complement the national case reports which is harder to find
Although the National case reports are freely available via the web authors are junior and hence these are not peer reviewed and lacks consistent quality
Service is continuously updated
Benefit for users is the commentary and analysis
OUP launched OLRL in 2014 with the scope to establish entry positions based on the content we hold copyright clearance to and have not been able to migrate online in the past.
OLRL provides a reusable environment for creating subject-oriented collections of work, integrating them in terms of search and citations, and for keeping them up-to-date
Relevant to Lawyer, scholars and graduate students