An Interview with Maximilian Spitzley, Foreign Law Intern
Posted by: Jenny Gesley
Today's blog post is an interview with Foreign Law Intern Maximilian Spitzley.
Posted in: Interview, Law Library
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Posted by: Jenny Gesley
Today's blog post is an interview with Foreign Law Intern Maximilian Spitzley.
Posted in: Interview, Law Library
Posted by: Taylor Gulatsi
Today's blog post is a Congress.gov interview with Christy Amatos, Assistant Parliamentarian for the US Senate and the decade she has spent working on Capitol Hill.
Posted in: Guest Post, Interview, Law Library
Posted by: Taylor Gulatsi
Today's blog post is a guest post by Andrew Reiter, legislative data specialist with CRS on modernizing Congressional data with a focus on Senate Legislation and Amendments on Congress.gov.
Posted in: Congress, Education, Law Library
Posted by: Ruth Levush
Today's blog post explains the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) that was signed for the Women’s Empowerment Project (WEP) International Program. WEP was sponsored by the Government of Taiwan in collaboration with the Government of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.
Posted in: Education, Global Law, Guest Post, Law Library
Posted by: Elin Hofverberg
Announcing the upcoming Foreign and Comparative International Law webinar on self-determination of gender in Europe, titled, What's in a Legal Gender? A Guide to European Gender Determination Laws.
Posted in: Event, Global Law, In the News, Law Library
Posted by: Robert Brammer
This post links to the recording of the 2024 Congress.gov Public Forum
Posted in: Congress, Event, Law Library
Posted by: Taylor Gulatsi
Today's blog post announces and encourages applicants for the the 2025 Daniel and Florence Guggenheim Scholars Program to conduct research at the Law Library of Congress.
Posted in: Education, Law Library
Posted by: Bailey DeSimone
Where does our favorite morning beverage grow in the United States, and how is it regulated? Pour a cup of coffee and learn about the Code of Federal Regulations with Bailey before traveling to the two areas of the United States where coffee production is regulated.
Posted in: Collections, Hispanic American History, Law Library, Pacific Islander History, Uncategorized
Posted by: Jennifer González
This blog article explores the lives of women in the prohibition era, during which some women became public drinkers, bootleggers, and Prohibition agents for the first time.
Posted in: Collections, Guest Post, Law Library, Women's History