LEGAL WEBSITE OF THE MONTH ARCHIVE
2026
Trademark law : an open-source casebook
This resource provides public access to the Trade Law casebook, beginning with The History of U.S. Trademark Law and The Origins of Trademarks and Trademark Law, highlighting how the early development of trademark law raises questions that continue to concern courts and policymakers–particularly regarding the proper rationale for trademark protection and the scope of trademark rights.
LawHelp.org
LawHelp is a program of Pro Bono Net, a national nonprofit dedicated to bringing the power of the law to all. LawHelp.org was created to help people without lawyers understand their rights, make informed decisions, and connect with help in their local communities. LawHelp.org provides referrals to nonprofit legal aid organizations in every state and territory, free legal rights resources, court forms, and self-advocacy tools. The site also includes a network of 20 statewide legal information portals developed using the LawHelp platform, and links to other trusted sources of legal help.
People-Centred Land Governance for Peace, Security and Stability: Exploring Rule of Law Solutions
The publication frames people-centred land governance not just as a technical land administration issue but as a rule of law and peacebuilding priority – one that strengthens social cohesion, reduces drivers of conflict, and supports sustainable development pathways. It offers practical policy recommendations to governments, international partners and civil society for advancing these objectives.
2025
H2O
H2O is a free platform that helps faculty reduce textbook costs for their students, gain greater control over their course materials, and expand the possibilities of open legal education. The open-access casebooks in H2O enable users to create, share, and remix openly licensed casebooks and other course materials. The platform is developed and maintained by the Library Innovation Lab at the Harvard Law School Library. More detailed information can be foundÂ
Essential legal research skills in Aotearoa New Zealand
This guide to legal research and citation of New Zealand law provides direction to students undertaking legal research. It may also be useful for members of the public and self-represented litigants. It covers the core skills and knowledge for effective legal research, such as creating a search strategy, identifying where to locate legal information and legal citation using the New Zealand Law Style Guide. This text explores searching for sources of legal information including case law, legislation and commentary and explains the different approaches required to locate and cite these sources of law.
CLBB NeuroLaw Library
The CLBB NeuroLaw Library, issued by the Center for Law, Brain and Behavior NeuroLaw Library, provides public access to reliable neuroscience knowledge to promote fairer, more effective, and science-oriented judicial outcomes.
50 Constitutions: Explore State Constitutions
50 Constitutions, a project of the University of Wisconsin Law School’s State Democracy Research Initiative, seeks to make state constitutions more accessible through a central repository of searchable texts, supplemented by resources and research tools. Their Tracking Constitutional Change feature allows users to see how constitutions have evolved over time and to explore key historical moments. With the redline tool, users can compare a provision’s language across different dates and identify specific textual changes. The State Democracy Research Initiative promotes research and dialogue on state-level democracy, government institutions, and public law nationwide. By centering on the states, the Initiative provides a vital resource for academics, courts, policymakers, advocates, and the public.
State court report (Brennan Center for Justice)
The State court report, issued by the Brennan Center for Justice in New York, provides public access to legal news, trends, and cutting-edge scholarship. It offers insights and commentary from a nationwide network of academics, journalists, judges, and practitioners with diverse perspectives and expertise.
Civil Rights Division
Established by the Civil Rights Act of 1957, the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice was created to uphold the civil and constitutional rights of all individuals in the United States. Since its founding, the Division has grown significantly in size and scope, playing a key role in many of the nation’s landmark civil rights battles. It enforces federal laws that prohibit discrimination based on race, color, sex, disability, religion, familial status, national origin, and citizenship status. The Division also strives to educate the public about its work and continually improves its website to enhance accessibility and usability. If you would like to share feedback regarding any part of the Division’s website, please share it at crt.overview@usdoj.gov
Wildland Fire
The Landscape Partnership Portal website serves as a clearinghouse to support technical experts, fostering a community of practice. It connects individuals and diverse groups by linking the wildland fire information they maintain on their respective websites, enhancing connectivity and information sharing both within the broader fire community and between the fire community of practice and other landscape conservation practitioners.
GovInfo
GovInfo is a service of the U.S. Government Publishing Office (GPO), a federal agency within the legislative branch and provides public access to official publications from all three branches of the Federal Government.  GPO launched GovInfo in February 2016 to replace its predecessor, the Federal Digital System (FDsys). GovInfo was redesigned to incorporate user feedback and improve search and access to electronic federal government information. The mobile-friendly site uses innovative technologies and offers new features to enhance the overall user experience.
Govspeak: A Guide to Government Acronyms & Abbreviations
The Govspeak website, researched and compiled by Subject Specialist Librarian Kelly L. Smith at the UC San Diego Library, lists acronyms and abbreviations commonly used by the United States federal government. Each entry is defined and includes a link to the homepage of its corresponding institution.
Catalog of U.S. Government Publications (CGP)
The Catalog of U.S. Government Publications (CGP) is the search tool for print and electronic titles of the National Bibliography of U.S. Government Publications. The National Bibliography includes publications from across the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of the U.S. Government. The CGP is a bibliography, not a document repository, and provides links to full-text resources that are the official, authoritative copy of an electronic resource. The current CGP came online in 2006. The CGP was originally the online counterpart of the Monthly Catalog of United States Government Publications. Commonly referred to as the Monthly Catalog, or MoCat. The online catalog lists all of the publications produced by the U.S. Government Printing Office from 1895 to 2004. The MoCat was discontinued with the December 2004 edition; now the continuously-updated CGP serves as the official record.
Vaccination Laws
The Vaccination Laws website, compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in partnership with other organizations, provides vaccination requirements and regulations to support and enhance vaccine safety.
2024
CanLII
The Canadian Legal Information Institute (CanLII) is a non-profit organization established in 2001 by the Federation of Law Societies of Canada. Its French title is Institut canadien d’information juridique. CanLII is supported by 14 member law societies and aims to provide efficient access to a comprehensive collection of current judicial decisions and legislative documents. It serves the legal profession by supporting lawyers in their duties and offers the public access to laws and legal cases from all Canadian jurisdictions.
LEXSITUS
Lexsitus is an open access online platform for learning and working with legal sources in international criminal law. Users can create reading lists and take notes while working on legal documents. It is developed by the Center for International Law Research and Policy (CILRAP) Â in partnership with the International Nuremberg Principles Academy, HELM Studio, and Mithya Labs in 2018. Lexsitus offers access to a variety of resources, including lectures, case law, commentary, and digests. The platform is structured around the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) Rome Statute, Rules of Procedure and Evidence, and Elements of Crimes. Lexsitus’s design is based on the ICC’s legal practice, making it useful for both beginners and advanced users.
Immi
The Immi Website provides immigrants in the U.S. with free resources to understand their legal options. Their platform offers an online screening tool, legal information, and referrals to nonprofit legal services organizations, all available at no cost. Immi was developed by the Immigration Advocates Network and Pro Bono Net, two nonprofit organizations committed to expanding access to justice for low-income immigrants.
Sovereignty Symposium
The Sovereignty Symposium was founded in 1988 by Oklahoma Supreme Court Justice Yvonne Kauger to advance the collective understanding of legal principles and doctrines. The Sovereignty Symposium is the premier annual national legal conference focusing on aspects of tribal sovereignty and government to provide critical analyses of contemporary legal issues and propose innovative solutions. The production of the Symposium transitioned to Oklahoma City University and Oklahoma City University School of Law in 2023. This collection includes papers and other materials written by the panelists (faculty) of each year’s Symposium and artwork created for each year’s Symposium.
Global Plastic Laws
The Global Plastic Laws Database is the most extensive tool to date to research, track, and visualize plastic legislation that has been passed around the world. The Database tracks legislation across the full life cycle of plastics and organizes these policies according to life cycle categories and key topics. Recognizing the impacts of plastics throughout its full life cycle, this database is organized into nine topics: Design and Reuse, Extended Producer Responsibility, Maritime Sources, Microplastics, Production and Manufacturing, Reduction, Transparency and Traceability, Waste Management, and Waste Trade. The Global Plastic Laws Database is updated regularly, providing a way to monitor and identify emerging trends, solutions, and policy innovations at local, national, and international levels.
Virtual Tribunals
A collaboration with the Stanford University Libraries, the Virtual Tribunals project is a major initiative of the Center for Human Rights and International Justice. The scope of the Virtual Tribunals is international criminal tribunal records, from the post-WWII cases through the contemporary tribunals, fully digitized, and rendered searchable through a single online portal. The Virtual Tribunals platform would facilitate public access to the single most comprehensive database of archival material from the tribunals and truth commissions established in the wake of mass atrocities around the globe. The search function in the Virtual Tribunal would make the discovery of multilingual and multimedia materials far easier and more efficient for both legally trained and non-expert users, so these historic collections could have a much wider impact on educational institutions and lay-audiences, including populations directly affected by conflict or living in relevant diaspora communities. This project takes seriously the question of how temporary institutions might leave behind a legacy that will be of lasting value for scholars, experts, and international students, as well as for the people of the post-conflict societies in whose name these tribunals have been pursuing justice.
US State Privacy Legislation Tracker
The International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP) founded in 2000 is a not-for-profit association. The IAPP Westin Research Center actively tracks the proposed and enacted comprehensive privacy bills from across the U.S. to stay informed of the changing state privacy landscape. This information is compiled into a map, a detailed chart identifying key provisions in the legislation, and links to enacted state comprehensive privacy laws. The chart identifies fourteen provisions that commonly appear in comprehensive privacy laws to break into two categories – consumer rights and business obligations –Â Although many of the proposed bills will fail to become law, comparing the key provisions helps break down how privacy is developing in the U.S.
Caselaw Access Project (CAP)
The Caselaw Access Project (CAP) digitized the entirety of the Harvard Law School Library’s physical collection of American case law available through online and transformed over 40 million pages of U.S. court decision into a dataset of over 6.7 million cases that represent 360 years of U.S. legal history. The scope of CAP includes all state courts, federal courts, and territorial courts for American Samoa, Dakota Territory, Guam, Native American Courts, Navajo Nation, and the Northern Mariana Islands. The earliest case is from 1658, and more volumes are continuously added through 2020. Each volume has been converted into structured, case-level data broken out by majority and dissenting opinion, with human-checked metadata for party names, docket number, citation, and date.
Core International Crimes Evidence Database (CICED)
Core International Crimes Evidence Database (CICED) is a unique, tailor-made judicial database set up by Eurojust to preserve, analyze and store evidence of core international crimes (genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes). CICED enables the Agency to support national judicial authorities in identifying evidence located in another country that may be relevant to their own investigation. This evidence can be used to corroborate individual offences and events or to unveil systematic actions and provide contextual information.
Climate Change Laws of the World
Climate Change Laws of the World and Climate Change Litigation Databases compile several years of data collection by both the Grantham Research Institute and the Sabin Center, including the collaboration of Grantham Institute with GLOBE International on a series of Climate Legislation Studies. Climate Change Laws of the World includes national-level climate change legislation and policies globally. The database covers climate and climate-related laws, as well as laws and policies promoting low carbon transitions, which reflects the relevance of climate policy in areas including energy, transport, land use, and climate resilience.
ATIS (Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions)
The Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions (ATIS) founded in 1983 is a United States-based organization that develops technical and operational standards for the global telecommunications industry. ATIS has been a key player in the development and implementation of innovative communication technologies and solutions to drive the evolution of networks and services. ATIS is governed by a Board of Directors, which is composed of representatives from leading telecommunications companies, including AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile and US Cellular, among others. The organization operates through various committees, working groups, and forums, focused on specific areas of interest within the information and communications technology sector.
TEBTEBBA
Tebtebba (Indigenous Peoples’ International Centre for Policy Research and Education) ,established in 1996, is an indigenous peoples’ organization and works for the respect, protection and fulfillment of indigenous peoples’ rights and their self-determined sustainable development.  Tebtebba takes the lead in policy advocacy and campaigns on all issues affecting indigenous peoples and seeks to promote and disseminate widely indigenous peoples worldviews, their perspectives on key issues such as individual and collective human rights, sustainable development, climate change, biodiversity, traditional knowledge, customary laws and governance, conflict transformation, gender, etc.
2023
Court Statistics Project
The Court Statistics Project (CSP) provides a systematic means to develop a valid, uniform, and complete statistical database that details the operation of state court systems. It provides high-quality, baseline information on state court structure, jurisdiction, reporting practices, and caseload volume and trends. Effective management and planning at the local, state, and national levels depend on accurate, consistent, and comparable information to assess the business of the state courts, identify trends in litigation, and estimate future levels of demand. The CSP fulfills the vital role of translating diverse state court caseload statistics into a common framework that all states use when establishing their respective goals and policies. Information for the CSP’s national caseload databases comes from published and unpublished sources supplied by state court administrators and appellate court clerks.
Data for Defenders
The MDefenders Project is a faculty-sponsored organization at the University of Michigan Law School designed to (a) help current law students figure out if public defense is the right career path for them; (b) provide a nurturing and supportive community for aspiring public defenders; (c) teach aspiring public defenders skills to help them succeed as public defenders; (d) connect University of Michigan alumni who are doing public defense work with one another and provide them with helpful resources; and (e) help connect students and alumni interested in public defense jobs with employers who are looking to hire public defenders. This project is founded on the belief that high-quality defense work starts and ends with people: giving context to the circumstances of the people we represent, giving consideration to the ways that people think and learn, and giving the right information to the people tasked with decision-making inside the courtroom.
Understanding the Indigenous and Tribal People Convention, 1989 (No. 169): Handbook for ILO Tripartite Constituents
The handbook is written by Birgitte Feiring, former Chief Technical Adviser of the ILO’s Programme to Promote ILO Convention No. 169 (PRO 169). This handbook aims to answer some of the essential questions of ILO constituents regarding the Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention, 1989 (No. 169). Convention No. 169 is a unique Convention. Adopted by the International Labour Conference (ILC) in 1989, it represents a consensus reached by ILO tripartite constituents. Indigenous and tribal peoples are among the vulnerable groups of concern to the ILO to promote social justice, internationally recognized human and labour rights and Decent Work. Takes a holistic approach covering a wide range of issues that affect the lives and well-being of these peoples and has become a global reference point with impact on governance and development policies.
PATENT LAW: CASES, PROBLEMS, AND MATERIALS
The 3rd Edition of Patent Law: Cases, Problems, and Materials is a public accessible patent law casebook. The full casebook PDF is downloadable online free of charge, and a print version is available at-cost from Amazon. The focus of this casebook is on bringing conceptual clarity to the details of modern patent practice, while also placing patent law in its social context. Many practice problems are introduced throughout the casebook to apply patent doctrines to fact patterns from real cases and to hypotheticals constructed to isolate and explain difficult concepts.
Mapping civilian harm claims against Israel and the Palestinian Authority before Israeli courts
This interactive map database jointly developed by Professor Gilat Bachar at Temple University Beasley School of Law and Dr. Haim Abraham at the University College London, and the NGO, Ceasefire, Center for Civilian Rights. The database presents over 450 Israeli court cases in which civilians sought compensation under tort law for loss of life, bodily injury, and property damage inflicted during armed activities. Included cases are Palestinian civilians who were injured by Israeli security forces in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank in addition to claims of other nationals, as well as cases in which Israeli civilians sought compensation against Hamas and the Palestinian Authority for losses incurred during hostilities for the facilitation of reparations and reconciliation.
Governing Rules and Responsibilities
The Governing Rules and Responsibilities Website outlines regulations dealing with government contracting programs for small businesses and provides access to the Federal Acquisition Regulation for the government’s purchasing process. You will learn about the contract provisions to protect the integrity of the government procurement process.
WIPO Lex
The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) is the global forum for intellectual property (IP) services, policy, and information. The mission of the organization is to lead the development of a balanced and effective international IP system. The WIPO Lex Database is a one-stop search for the intellectual property (IP) laws, regulations, WIPO-administered treaties and IP‑related treaties, and IP judgments. The WIPO Lex Website features related information to analyze and interpret these laws and treaties.
National Freedom of Information Coalition
The National Freedom of Information Coalition (NFOIC) is a nonprofit and nonpartisan resource to protect our right to open government by ensuring state and local governments and public institutions have laws, policies and procedures to facilitate press and public access to information and proceedings. The mission of NFOIC is to support and empower state coalitions in order to improve the laws, judicial remedies, and practice of government information dissemination at the state and local levels. NFOIC is proactively working to integrate new voices into the government transparency world, recognizing that information is critical to empowering marginalized groups, and that new perspectives are essential to healthy civic engagement and democracy.
DIGITAL MEDIA LAW PROJECT
The Digital Media Law Project (DMLP) was founded with the mission through five core initiatives: (1) its detailed Legal Guide on media and business law topics for non-lawyers; (2) its searchable Database of Legal Threats directed at online publishers; (3) its nationwide attorney referral service, the Online Media Legal Network; (4) its Research & Response initiative to address breaking issues and trends in digital media law; and (5) its regularly-updated Blog and Newsletter on current issues in media law, technology law and journalism. Also the DMLP publishes a comprehensive legal guide for individuals and organizations involved in independent online publishing and journalism. The guide covers topics ranging from how to form a business to how to use freedom of information and open meetings laws to get access to information, meetings, and governmental records, as well as other legal subjects such as risks associated with online publication, including discussion of defamation and privacy torts; legal issues related to news gathering; use of copyrighted and trademarked materials; and special risks associated with covering elections.
Center for Reproductive Rights
The Center for Reproductive Rights is a global human rights organization of lawyers and advocates who can apply their expertise and experience in human rights, comparative, and constitutional law across five continents. The Center is the only global legal advocacy organization dedicated to advancing reproductive rights as fundamental human rights around the world and envisions a world where every person participates with dignity as an equal member of society, regardless of gender;Â where every woman is free to decide whether or when to have children and whether to get married; where access to quality reproductive health care is guaranteed; and where every woman can make these decisions free from coercion or discrimination.
Cryptocurrency 2022 Legislation
The National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) complied the cryptocurrency enacted legislation of the thirty-seven states in the 2022 legislative session. Digital currencies are a medium of exchange but are not regular money. Digital currencies are stored in digital wallets, which are software or apps installed by users on their computer or mobile device. Each digital wallet contains encrypted information, called public and private keys, that is used to send and receive the digital currency. All digital currency transactions are recorded in a virtual public ledger called the “blockchain,” which is maintained by digital currency “miners.” These miners can be anyone, anywhere in the world, who is willing to invest in the specialized computer hardware needed to rapidly process complex computations. Miners are awarded digital currency, like Bitcoin, Ripple, Dogecoin, and Litecoin, in exchange for verifying each transaction and adding it to the blockchain.
2022
Animal Legal and Historical Center Website
In March 2022, the Animal Legal & Historical Center celebrated its 20th anniversary. Over the years, with the help of many individuals, they’ve added thousands of files that are accessed across the globe. Included are full text cases (US, Historical and UK), U.S. statutes, and legal articles addressing a wide variety of animal topics. This is the best way for non-lawyers to access the information. The international collection continues to expand. Please share your comments at animallaw@law.msu.edu. Your feedback helps ensure this site’s growth and presence for years to come.
AMERICAN DECLARATION ON THE RIGHTS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
The American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was adopted at the Third Plenary Session of the Organization of American States (OAS) General Secretariat held on June 15, 2016. The indigenous peoples of the Americas are culturally distinct groups who maintain an ancestral bond to the lands where they live or wish to live. Also, the Indigenous peoples of the Americans have the right to live in harmony with nature and to a healthy, safe, and sustainable environment, essential conditions for the full enjoyment of the right to life, to their spirituality, world view and to collective well-being.
National Conference of State Legislatures
The National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) founded in 1975 provides information about legislatures in the states, territories and commonwealths of the U.S. Its mission is to advance the effectiveness, independence, and integrity of legislatures and to improve the operations and management of state legislatures, and the effectiveness of legislators and legislative staff.
Nonprofit law blogs
Nonprofit law blogs website hosted by Gene Takagi, a Principal at NEO Law Group, provides practical and responsive counsel that helps nonprofits and their leaders further their missions and values. NEO Law Group believes that healthy nonprofits are more effective at creating positive change. NEO Law Group represented over 800 nonprofits over the past 15 years on matters including formations, fiscal sponsorship, governance, collaborations, affiliations, mergers, advocacy, earned income, and general nonprofit corporate and tax law compliance. NEO Law Group also presented on nonprofit legal topics to charities, private foundations, bar associations, and CPA associations throughout the country.
Nolo’s legal encyclopedia
Legal encyclopedia Website provides free legal articles and legal updates such as a new critical U. S. Supreme Court decision on search-and-seizure rights. Major topics include: accidents & injuries; bankruptcy; business, LLCs & corporations; criminal law; divorce & family law; DUI/DWI & traffic tickets; employment law; immigration; nonprofits; patents, copyright & trademark; personal finance & retirement; real estate & rental property; small claims court & lawsuits; taxes; wills, trusts & estates. Also includes information on doing legal research, podcasts, Nolo’s Plain-English Law Dictionary, a financial calculator, and selected free online books.
Court Listener
The Court Listener Website provides public access to primary legal materials on the Internet for educational, charitable, and scientific purposes to the benefit of the general public and the public interest as well as to technologies useful for academic research on corpora and legal systems.
Free Law Project is a California non-profit public benefit corporation and a federally-recognized 501(c)(3) public charity whose specific purposes are primarily to create an open ecosystem for legal research and materials and to carry on other charitable activities associated with these purposes, including, but not limited to, publications, meetings, conferences, trainings, educational seminars, and the issuance of grants and other financial support to educational institutions, foundations, and other organizations exclusively for educational, charitable, and scientific purposes as allowed by law.
Free Law Project also has several initiatives that collect and share legal information, including the largest collection of American oral argument audio, daily collection of new legal opinions from 200 United States courts and administrative bodies.
Locating the law
The Committee of the Southern California Association of Law Libraries (SCALL) made accessible a revised version of their comprehensive legal reference resource Locating the Law: A Handbook for Non-Law Librarians, 6th ed. The handbook provides ready access to a reliable legal research reference resource to assist you in reading legal citations and how to conduct legal research.
UN Archives Geneva
The UN Archives Geneva Website provides access to the fonds and collections managed by the United Nations Library and Archives in Geneva, including the archives of the United Nations in Geneva, the League of Nations (1919-1946), international peace movements (from 1870), and private papers.
It offers the possibility to search both the description of files or archival documents and in the full text of archival documents that have been digitized.
American State Papers
The American State Papers, comprising a total of thirty-eight physical volumes, is a collection of the legislative and executive documents of Congress during the period 1789 to 1838. The collection includes documents that cover the critical historical gap from 1789 to the printing of the first volume of the U.S. Serial Set in 1817. There are 6,278 documents in 38 volumes. They are arranged into ten topical classes or series as follows:
| I. Foreign Relations II. Indian Affairs III. Finances IV. Commerce and Navigation V. Military Affairs |
VI. Naval Affairs VII. Post Office Department VIII. Public Lands IX. Claims X. Miscellaneous |
TAX NOTES
Tax Notes is a portfolio of publications offered by Tax Analysts, a nonprofit tax publisher. It provides comprehensive and impartial coverage of tax news, while its commentary contributes important voices to the discussion and understanding of tax policy.
Founded in 1970, Tax Analysts was created to foster free, open, and informed discussion about taxation. In 1972 Tax Analysts published , its first weekly journal, featuring news, commentary, and analysis on federal taxation. In 1989 Tax Analysts added , a weekly magazine focused on international taxation.  State rounded out the weekly portfolio in 1991. Each magazine offers best-in-class tax commentary and analysis on the latest changes in tax law and policy, as well as on court opinions, legislative action, and revenue rulings.
Tax Notes has continued to innovate through the years, adding the online daily news services ,Ìý, and  between 1987 and 1991. Tax Notes also provides several research and reference tools, as well as specialized services focusing on exempt organizations, state tax audit guidance, and international tax treaties.
Strategies and techniques for Integrating diversity, equity and inclusion into the core law curriculum
Professor Teri A. McMurtry-Chubb at the University of Illinois Chicago School of Law has authored a book about the strategies to incorporate diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) into classrooms. The focus of this publication is on learning outcomes and assessments, and course planning templates for each course in the core law curriculum, and racial trauma-informed teaching approaches. Each chapter also includes FAQs and discussion questions to work through for the course planning and DEI curricular initiatives to transform the way we think, teach, learn and act such that all experiences and ways of being are handled with fairness and justice.
Judicature
Duke Law School took on the publication of Judicature in May 2015 after the American Judicature Society (AJS) disbanded after promoting the interests of justice and judiciary more than a century.
Judicature is published under the auspices of the Bolch Judicial Institute at Duke Law School, which was established in 2018. Its missions are to study the rule of law as well as advancing legal research for deepening our understanding of the law to improve the administration of justice.
In fall 2021, Judicature International launches online to provide judges around the globe with a forum for sharing commentary, scholarship, empirical research, opinion, and other content exploring issues of common concern to judges around the world.

