November 5

Regulation Data – updated

I went back and rechecked my regulation data – I got sloppy on the last column “search” when doing it initially – as I said, I finished it up on the day before I left on a vacation to Central America that I’d been planning on for about a year, so I was a little distracted – but I went back through and checked it over I’m pretty sure it all good now.

 

So here’s the spreadsheet containing information on the state of state regulations.

November 5

Copyright of State Documents and General Update

One of the many annoying factors in analyzing the data I have on state published law is the copyright issue.  Some states flat out say that they are claiming copyright on their published law, some just have a “copyright state of X” notice on the bottom of their webpages (which leaves it ambiguous as to whether they mean the law itself or just their groovy circa 1998 web page design), and some have no copyright notice but have a terms of use that prevents one from actually using the published law such that they might as well slap a copyright on it.   Happily, the folks at Harvard and Berkman have created this handy guide that breaks down (or at least provides some guidance) on the status of copyright on state documents.  I shall be incorporating it into my data analysis.

In other news, I’m putting Project X on the backburner for the time being and re-diving into my data collection analysis on state published law.  (I needed the break from the data and also Project X is now at a good point to break from it – I’ll really be heading into it full time in 2016.  I just was doing some preliminary work to reassure myself that there’s enough out there for Project X to work.  Possibly.  Anyway…)   I want to re-go over my regulations data – sharp eyed folks will notice I unpublished the link to it.   I found a mistake and I’m worried that my distraction in finishing it the day before leaving on a year-long planned vacation didn’t make me as cautious as I should have been.   Then I’m going to generally clean up the data so all the fun graphs and charts work right and try to figure out what it all means.  Besides the initial reaction of “omg this is so much worse than I thought.”

While I was gone at a conference in Canada, it was finally announced that the lab which I’m affiliated with – the Harvard Library Innovation Lab – is working with Ravel to digitize all of U.S. Case law.  I really admire my colleagues at LIL and all the hard work they have done to make this happen.  It’s a good thing.

Finally, the conference I went to in Canada was on law libraries and access to justice, especially in rural communities.  It was an interesting mix of legal aid attorneys, public librarians and law librarians.  It was good to see that there is interest in all sides to collaborate and make legal information and knowledge more available to communities.