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Law Library Resources and Planning in Canada

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 February 2019

Marianne Scott*
Affiliation:
McGill University, 3644 Peel Street, Montreal 2, Quebec, Canada H3 A 1 W9

Extract

Law libraries, like all other types of liberaries, are undergoing a period of rapid change, as a result of the greatly increased production of printed materials, the adaptation to new technology and the introduction of new media. To meet these challenges successfully requires careful planning. Planning inevitably makes one think of the future; the very word ‘plan', which means an organized method according to which something is to be done, is future oriented. However, to appreciate fully the present state of planning for law libraries in Canada, it is helpful first to have some idea of the history of our development. It is a history which indicates that law library service in Canada has been very slow in evolving. This fact, which I had long suspected to be the case, became quite apparent to me when in 1971 I had the occasion to write an article on law libraries in Canada for the Law Library Journal. I will not go into all the historical detail at this time but simply mention the major points.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © International Association of Law Libraries 1975 

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References

1 “Law Libraries in Canada”, (1971) 64 Law Library Journal, 314–322.Google Scholar

2 Cohen, Maxwell, “The Condition of Legal Education in Canada”, (1950) 28 Can. Bar Rev. 267–314.Google Scholar

3 This is only referring to those libraries designed primarily for the use of law students.Google Scholar

4 For a thorough explanation of this movement in legal education in Canada, see Cecil A. Wright, “Should the Profession Control Legal Education”, (1950) 3 J. Legal Ed. 1–38.Google Scholar

5 For a more detailed review of this expansion, see Cohen, Maxwell, “The condition of legal education in Canada – fifteen years later 1949–1964”, (1964) Can. Bar Papers, 117–131.Google Scholar

6 Canadian Association of Law Libraries. Committee on Law School Library Statistics. Report. Statistical Survey 1972/73, 1973/74.Google Scholar

7 An act to amend the Law Society Act, S.O. 1973, c. 49. An act to amend the Legal Professions Act, S.B.C. 1969, c. 15.Google Scholar

8 Canadian Bar Association. Committee on Legal Research. Report. (1956) 34 Can. Bar Rev. 999–1064.Google Scholar

9 Ibid, p 1013.Google Scholar

11 Canadian Bar Association Committee on Legal Research. Report (1956) 34 Can. Bar Rev. 1051.Google Scholar

12 Wm. A. Roalfe. The Libraries of the Legal Profession. St. Paul, 1953.Google Scholar

13 A.A.L.S. Anatomy of Modern Legal Education. St. Paul, 1961 Google Scholar

14 Simon, B. V. Library Support of Medical Education and Research in Canada. Ottawa, Association of Canadian Medical Colleges, 1964 Google Scholar

15 Annual Report of the National Librarian, 1958, p 9Google Scholar

16 Williams, E. E. Resources of Canadian university libraries for research in the humanities and social sciences, report of a survey. Ottawa, National Conference of Canadian Universities and Colleges, 1962 Google Scholar

17 Ibid. p 58Google Scholar

18 Downs, Robert B. Resources of Canadian Academic and Research Libraries. Ottawa. Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada, 1967 Google Scholar

19 Research Collections in Canadian Libraries, I Universities. Ottawa, National Library of Canada 1974. PrefaceGoogle Scholar