Professor Osborne Presents New Scholarship on Scholarly Impact at UNC KRELL Scholarship Series

On Monday, April 6, 2020, Professor Caroline Osborne and co-author Stephanie Miller presented new scholarship as part of the UNC KRELL Scholarship Series. The Kathrine R. Everett Law Library Scholarship Series is a workshop opportunity designed to foster scholarship to the profession and careers of law librarians. The workshop series is coordinated by Anne Klinefelter, Professor of Law and Director of the Law Library ant UNC School of Law. The paper, The Scholarly Impact Matrix: An Empirical Study of How Multiple Metrics Create and Informed Story of a Scholar's Work was presented virtually to a group of 11 other scholars and law librarians.

From the abstract:

Professor Osborne Featured in Annual Compilation of Scholarship on Computers, Technology, and the Law

West Virginia University law professor Caroline Osborne is featured in the recently published Fiftieth Selected Bibliography on Computers, Technology, and the Law. The bibliography is published annually by the Rutgers Computer and Technology Law Journal and provides a compilation of the most important and timely articles on the topic.

Two of Professor Osborne's recent publications are featured:

WVU College of Law SSRN Paper Series Publishes Volume 7, Issue 3

The West Virginia University College of Law Research Paper Series published Volume 7, Issue 3 on August 2, 2019. The following authors were featured for their scholarship recently published to SSRN:

James Friedberg, Yitz and Ishmael: A Drama in One Very Long Act, International Law, Settlements and the Two-State Solution, and Nuclear Weapons, Elephants, Israel and the World Court.

WVU Law at SEALS: Saturday August 3, 2019

This week, WVU Law faculty members are presenting and discussing their scholarship at the 2019 SEALS Annual Conference in Boca Raton, Florida. On Saturday, August 3, 2019 Professor Caroline Osborne participated in a discussion group at the conference participated in a discussion group titled "Providing Non-Traditional Library Services: A Bridge Too Far or Part of a Responsive Relationship" moderated by Professor Kristina Niedringhaus of Georgia State University College of Law.

From the program:

Professor Osborne Presents on Scholarly Impact at AALL Annual Meeting

West Virginia University College of Law professor Caroline Osborne recently presented on the topic of scholarly impact and the discoverability of legal scholarship at the American Association of Law Libraries annual meeting. The program, titled Maximizing Your Faculty's Scholarly Impact: Techniques to Increase Findability, was presented with Carol Watson and T.J. Stiepe of the University of Georgia School of Law.