台湾SWAG

Outstanding Article Award

罢丑别听ALL-SIS Outstanding Article Award聽has honored section members since 2002 for contributions to the enhancement of academic law librarianship through publishing. To qualify for consideration, articles must be:

  • published in the year prior to the award,
  • in any format,
  • in any publication (other than聽Law Library Journal听补苍诲听台湾SWAG Spectrum, because articles in those publications are eligible for a 台湾SWAG award), and
  • about any aspect of academic law librarianship.

Awards are given at the discretion of the committee. No awards were given in 2003, 2006, or 2018.

Winners

Caroline L. Osborne & Stephanie Miller, The Scholarly Impact Matrix:聽 An Empirical Study of How Multiple Metrics Create an Informed Story of a Scholar鈥檚 Work, 39 Legal Ref. Serv. Q. 238 (2020).
Jennifer L. Behrens, Unknown Symbols: Online Legal Research in the Age of Emoji, 38 Legal Ref. Serv. Q. 155 (2019).
Douglas W. Lind, A Bibliography of Littleton鈥檚 Tenures as an Archetype for the Study of Early English Legal Printing, 37 32 Legal Ref. Serv. Q. 38 (2018).
Susan David deMaine, Preparing Law Students for Information Governance, 35 Legal Ref. Serv. Q. 101 (2016).
2016 Awards / Outstanding Article: Catherine A. Lemmer, Competitive Intelligence Instruction to Develop Practice-Ready Legal Professionals, 34 Legal Ref. Serv. Q. 268 (2015).
2015 Awards / Outstanding Article: James M. Donovan, Carol A. Watson, & Caroline Osborne, The Open Access Advantage for American Law Reviews, Edison 2015-03A,
2014 Awards / Outstanding Article: Cindy Guyer, Experiential Learning: Context and Connections for Legal Research鈥揂 Case Study, 32 Legal Ref. Serv. Q. 161 (2013).
2013 Awards / Outstanding Article: Lee F. Peoples, Testing the Limits of WestlawNext, 31 Legal Ref. Serv. Q. 125-49 (2012).
2012 Awards / Outstanding Article: Aliza B. Kaplan & Kathleen Darvil, Think [and Practice] Like a Lawyer: Legal Research for the New Millennials, 8 Leg. Comm. & Rhetoric 153 (2011).
2011 Awards / Outstanding Article: Terry Ballard & Anna Blaine, The Changing Face of Current Awareness Reporting in Law Libraries, 111 New Libr. World 104 (2010).
2010 Awards / Outstanding Article: Nancy P. Johnson, What First-Year Law Students Should Learn in a Legal Research Class, 28 Legal Ref. Serv. Q. 77 (2009).
2009 Awards / Outstanding Article: Daniel W. Martin, Katherine Pratt, & Jennifer M. Kowal, The Virtual Tax Library: A Comparison of Five Electronic Tax Research Platforms, 8 Fla. Tax Rev. 931 (2008).
2008 Awards / Carol Parker, Institutional Repositories and the Principle of Open Access: Changing the Way We Think About Legal Scholarship, 7 N.M. L. Rev. 431 (2007).
2007 Awards / Outstanding Article: Bonnie Shucha, The State of the Law Library Blogosphere, www.llrx.com.
2005 Awards / Outstanding Article: Nancy M. Babb, Cataloging Spirits and the Spirit of Cataloging, 40 Cataloging & Classification Q. 89 (no. 2, 2005).
2004 Awards / Outstanding Articles: Nancy Carol Carter, The Special Case of Alaska: Native Law and Research, 22 Leg. Ref. Servs. Q. 11 (no. 4, 2003).
Matthew Cordon, Beyond Mere Competency: Advanced Legal Research in a Practice-Oriented Curriculum, 55 Baylor L. Rev. 1 (2003).
2002 Awards / Outstanding Article: Melissa M. Serfass and Jessie L. Cranford, Federal and State Court Rules Governing Publication and Citation of Opinions, 3 J. App. Prac. & Process 251 (Spring 2001).