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1 Legal Reference Services Q. 1 (1981)

handle is hein.journals/lgrefsq1 and id is 1 raw text is: 











                      EDITORIAL





  Upon its announcement, the Legal Reference Services Quarterly
initiated a burst of lively interest, a fact which we hope may ease
somewhat the understandable fears of those who are uncomfortable
with the proliferation of new periodicals.
  Legal reference is a wide but very special field. By launching
this periodical, we endorse the view that all librarians who do
reference work with legal collections have special challenges and
must demonstrate their special skills.
  Our immediate audience, of course, are those librarians who think
of themselves as law librarians and who work with collections
that cen ter around legal research. In addition, however, we will aim
in this and future issues to meet the needs of all reference librarians
who must deal with the increasing number of reference questions
that involve the law or where the legal aspect must be shown as part
of the complete reference answer.
  Our task in taking this view is, of course, immense because there
can be no doubt that law and legal literature have gone through a
veritable explosion of interest among all scholarly disciplines and
also the public. All major academic disciplines, from thehumanities
through the hard sciences, now take the socio-legal component into
their scope of concern, In addition, newspapers, television, and the
popular literaturk are now full of legal themes. From students
needing help with legal reference books for their classwork to
citizens who demand to know just what their rights are, any library
will be faced with an increasingly larger demand for help with
questions that involve the law.
  The goal of this journal is to assist, then, every reference librarian
  faced with those questions. It is intended as a forum for discussion
and a gathering place for questions. It is designed to contain the
type of article that can be of assistance in one's day-to-day work.
  This issue is our first attempt to illustrate that concept. Professor
  Les Peat, of the University of Vermont Law School, contributes an


Legal Reference Services Quarterly, Vol. 1(1), Spring 1981
            T 1981 The Haworth Press

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