This year there have been a number of new Law Library Reports published. I looked through In Custodia Legis and found all of the new reports that we blogged about over the year. They cover a wide range of topics.
- Legal Reports on Counterterrorism Laws and other Security Measures
- Parliaments Around the World
- New Resource Covers the Laws of 157 Countries on the Extradition of Citizens
- Our Detailed Report Covers the Refugee Laws of Twenty-Two Countries
- New Report Looks at Campaign Finance Laws in Seven Countries
- You Have the Right to Remain Silent…
- New Report Details the Regulation of Drones in Foreign Countries
- New Report on Education as a Constitutional Right in Foreign Countries
- Legal Approaches to Narcotics in Sixteen Countries
- New Law Library Reports Cover Access to Encrypted Communications and Intelligence Gathering
- New Report on Laws of Foreign Governments Lifting Sovereign Immunity
- New Report Examines Veterans Benefits to Non-Citizens in France and in Israel
- New Report Explains Egyptian Laws Related to Addressing Sexual Violence
- New Law Library Report on Genocide, Crimes Against Humanity, and War Crimes Jurisdiction
The most recent reports are published on our Current Legal Topics page.
I was happy to see that we published on average one new report each month. Our reports tend to be more viewed over time as people find them. Current events also drive traffic to our website. The following were the ten most-viewed Law Library Reports during 2016:
- Right to Peaceful Assembly: United States
- Restrictions on Genetically Modified Organisms: United States
- United States: Gun Ownership and the Supreme Court
- War Powers
- Sentencing Guidelines: South Africa
- Laws on Children Residing with Parents in Prison
- Firearms-Control Legislation and Policy: Germany
- Citizenship Based on Birth in Country
- Points-Based Immigration Systems: Canada
- Children’s Rights: Canada
Ruth highlighted the most viewed reports last year and Kelly provided a comprehensive list of those published in 2014.
If you want to find out when we publish new reports in 2017, subscribe to an email alert or to the RSS feed. We also tweet when new reports go online. Follow the Law Library’s Twitter account, @LawLibCongress.