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About the Organization
The Law Library of Congress serves a wide range of functions, some better known than others. The Law Library provides research and reference assistance, oversees the preeminent legal collection available, and houses an international staff of foreign law attorneys. Currently, the Law Library operates under three main areas of expertise:
Collection Services
The Law Library serves as the nation’s custodian of legal and legislative collections from all countries and legal systems of the world housed in the Library of Congress. As custodian, the Law Library maintains, retrieves, preserves, and secures the print and microform collections. Maintenance includes the shelving of all incoming volumes and serial pieces, filing of incoming loose-leaf updates, advance sheets and pocket parts, the weeding of superseded volumes; retrieval includes the servicing of any material requested; preservation includes the preparation for binding of newly collated volumes, the preparation of material to be digitized, microfilmed, or boxed; and security of the collection involves making sure all Library of Congress regulations on this topic are followed in the handling of the legal collection.
Twenty-six staff and six contracts which total thirty-five personnel under the supervision of an Assistant Director provide the full range of legal collections services within the Law Library of Congress.
Foreign Law Research
The Law Library of Congress provides foreign and comparative legal and legislative information services to national and global researchers through its Foreign Law Specialists. The Foreign Law Specialists are a diverse group of foreign trained attorneys whose primary jurisdictions include: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, European Union, France, Germany, Greece, India, Iran, Israel, Japan, Lebanon, Mexico, Nicaragua, Russia, and the United Kingdom. Other jurisdictions are attended to by additional foreign trained attorney retained under special contract. They provide research guidance and assistance using the Law Library's foreign, international, and comparative law collections, and provide information and analysis through the Law Library's Web site including electronic products such as:
The Law Librarian and two Assistant Directors, complemented by research analysts, administrative staff, and editorial support provide in-person and remote constituents with foreign law information services.
Public Services
In addition to foreign and comparative legal information services, the Law Library also provides research assistance and reference services for United States federal and state legal issues to national and global constituents. Through its staff of skilled American trained attorneys and law librarians, the Law Library guides requesters to appropriate print and electronic resources and advises constituents on efficient and effective research techniques. The staff produce a variety of online products including:
- Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation - provides access to historic legislative documents
- Guide to Law Online - an authoritative portal of legal and legislative information Web sites
- Legal Research and Collection Guides - find guides on legal research techniques, events and issues, and our collection
- THOMAS - provides research guidance in locating relevant documents and navigating contemporary legislative history matters found in this legislative database.
The staff, led by an Assistant Director, work in and through the Law Library Reading Room providing in person and remote constituents with legal information services.
Last Updated: 12/05/2008