The Law Library of Congress Invites Applications for the 2024 Guggenheim Scholars Program
Posted by: Robert Brammer
The Law Library of Congress invites applications for its 2024 Guggenheim Scholars Program
Posted in: Law Library
Top of page
Posted by: Robert Brammer
The Law Library of Congress invites applications for its 2024 Guggenheim Scholars Program
Posted in: Law Library
Posted by: Kelly Buchanan
Today’s interview is with Gerard Mosolo, a legal research fellow currently working in the Global Legal Research Directorate of the Law Library of Congress. Describe your background. I was born and raised in Binga, in the north region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). After elementary school, I went to a Catholic boarding …
Posted in: Global Law, Interview, Law Library
Posted by: Jennifer González
In summer 2023, the Law Library of Congress added foreign legal gazettes for the countries of Philippines, Burkina Faso, Kenya, and Botswana.
Posted in: Collections, Global Law, Law Library
Posted by: Bailey DeSimone
Learn about some of the monuments dedicated to Hispanic heritage individuals who shaped the governments of the Americas.
Posted in: Hispanic American History, Law Library, Pic of the Week
Posted by: Jenny Gesley
This blog post is an interview with Foreign Law Intern Laura Schwarz.
Posted in: Interview, Law Library
Posted by: Robert Brammer
The Congress.gov Enhancements for October of 2023.
Posted in: Congress
Posted by: Bailey DeSimone
Before hiking in a state park, Bailey researched the practice of foraging mushrooms in the U.S. Code and in the state of Connecticut. This is what she learned.
Posted in: Law Library
Posted by: Heather Casey
Did you know that while Costa Rica is only 0.03% of the land mass on earth, it contains nearly 6% of the world’s biodiversity? For a country that is slightly smaller than West Virginia, that is pretty impressive. As part of our ongoing celebration of National Hispanic Heritage Month, I want to look at some …
Posted in: Hispanic American History, Law Library, Pic of the Week
Posted by: Elin Hofverberg
In 2020, the Swedish Police solved a 16-year-old cold case using forensic genetic genealogy, a first for the country. Following the conviction, the Swedish Authority for Privacy Protection found that there was no legal basis for using investigative genetic genealogy. Earlier in 2023, the Danish and Swedish parliaments both voted on whether the police should have …
Posted in: Global Law, Law Library