Updated: 11/10/05; 2:59:59 PM.

  Rory Perry's Weblog
Law, technology, and the courts


daily link  Friday, March 7, 2003


Talkative lawyers create a nourishing thicket, or, Law is Free

One year ago today, I posted Law is Free, as an attempt to explain some of the underlying reasons for using broad publish/subscribe technology to put more legal information out there for free.

In the year since I wrote this story, I've grown more comfortable with the technology, and have added several new pages to the WV Supreme Court's offering of online information, each with its own RSS feed:
Click to see the XML version of this web page. Recent Opinions
Click to see the XML version of this web page. Civil Topics
Click to see the XML version of this web page. Criminal Topics
Click to see the XML version of this web page. Family Topics.
On the larger scale, we've seen wonderful growth in the quality, scope and timeliness of free legal content on the Web. During the past year, blawgs by law professors, legal scholars, journalists, appellate practitioners, law librarians, legal pundits, paralegals, law firms, international lawyers, trademark lawyers, law students, and law clerks have come online. (To read them all, check out Denise Howell's blawgroll--she coined the term "blawg", after all, and Ernie's Law Blawgs Outline.) Lawyers who can write code, or poetry, or design pages, or tell good stories, are all fastening quickly to the growing rubric of customized, smart and lively knowledge exchange. Outlanders no longer, blawgers have even been recognized by the American Bar Association.

Given all this, I have little doubt that more lawyers and legal professionals will continue the trend toward participation. And being a loquacious bunch, it's likely that our talking will have a beneficial side product: a deeper and more freely available body of knowledge about the law and its effects on our lives. That, I insist, is a good thing.

  3:24:20 PM  [Permanent Link]     

 
A weblog about information issues in the courts, with occassional diversions, authored by the Clerk of the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.
RSS:Click to see the XML version of this web page. E-mail:Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.

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 11/10/05; 2:44:04 PM.

COURTBLAWGS with XML
The Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia was the first court in the country to post opinions, news, and docket information in a weblog format, complete with RSS feeds, as part of the Court's official Web site.
Click to see the XML version of this web page. Recent Opinions
Click to see the XML version of this web page. Civil Topics
Click to see the XML version of this web page. Criminal Topics
Click to see the XML version of this web page. Family Topics

Resources for implementing this solution in your jurisdiction

Louisiana Supreme Court
Click to see the XML feed for Louisiana Supreme Court News Releases. News Releases

North Dakota Supreme Court
Click to see the XML feed for North Dakota Supreme Court News. Recent News
Click to see the XML feed for North Dakota Supreme Court Opinions. Recent Opinions

Oklahoma Courts
Click to see the XML feed for Oklahoma Recent Decisions. Recent Decisions/a>
Click to see the XML feed for Oklahoma Supreme Court Opinions. Supreme Court Opinions
Click to see the XML feed for Decisions of the Oklahoma Court of Civil Appeals. Court of Civil Appeals
Click to see the XML feed for Decisions of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals. Court of Criminal Appeals
Click to see the XML feed for Oklahoma Attorney General Opinions. Attorney General Opinions

Utah Appellate Courts
Click to see the XML feed for Utah Appellate Court Opinions. Recent Opinions

From Cornell's LII: US Supreme Court
Click to see the XML feed for today's US Supreme Court opinions. Today's Opinions
Click to see the XML feed covering issues in recent US Supreme Court opinions. Recent Opinions


For more RSS feeds from government sources, check out RSS in Government
US COURTS of LAST RESORT:
Supreme Court of the US;
AL, AK, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, DC, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NV, NH, NJ, NM, NY, NC, ND, OH, OK (Civ Crim), OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX (Civ Crim), UT, VT, VA, WA, WV, WI, WY
FULL LIST, including intermediate appellate courts, US possessions, and tribal courts.

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Last update: 11/10/05; 2:59:59 PM.