The Brooklyn Law School logo

BLS Library Blog

Showing 6 of 6 Results

03/30/2016
profile-icon BLS Reference Desk
No Subjects

studyroom

Beginning March 30th, 2016, the Library is using a new study room reservation system.  The link to this new system is on the library webpage and in BLS Connect.

  • Study rooms are now grouped by number of seats:  Small (2-4 people), Medium (6-8 people), and Large (10-12 people).
  • You must use a BLS email address to book a room.
  • Student reservations are limited to 4 hours per day.
  • You may remain in your room after the end of your reserved time if no one else has scheduled the room.
  • During the reading and examination period, the study rooms are locked and you must obtain the key to the room at the circulation desk.

We hope you find this new system easy to use and please let us know if you have questions or comments.

Show more
03/19/2016
profile-icon BLS Reference Desk
No Subjects

jordan

Joseph A. Jordan, was born in Norfolk Virginia and was a Brooklyn Law School graduate.  He was a veteran, paralyzed from the waist down during World War II and confined to a wheelchair.

As an attorney, Jordan and his firm, Jordan, Dawley & Holt, fought civil rights cases across the South during the 1960’s.  One such case made constitutional history,

In November 1963 Jordan filed suit on behalf of Mrs. Evelyn Thomas Butts to have the state’s poll tax declared unconstitutional. The poll tax was a tax levied on individuals as a prerequisite for voting. Although levied on all voters regardless of race, the tax effectively disenfranchised the poor, including many African-Americans. The tax was outlawed nationally in January 1964 by ratification of the 24th amendment, but it only addressed federal elections and remained silent on state and local applicability.

Jordan’s suit was defeated nine times by local and state courts before finally working its way up to the U.S. Supreme Court.  In March 1966 the case became part of the landmark decision, Harper v. Virginia State Board of Elections.   Only six years out of law school,  Jordan argued before the U.S. Supreme Court that Virginia’s poll tax should be struck down.  The court agreed and ruled it unconstitutional under the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment.

Joseph A. Jordan went on to become the first black elected to the Norfolk City Council since 1889. He served three terms on the council, including two years as vice mayor. In 1977, he was appointed to Norfolk’s General District Court and retired in 1986.

Show more
03/11/2016
profile-icon BLS Reference Desk
No Subjects

Spring-Break

The Library hours for the BLS spring recess are:

Saturday, March 19:  9am – 10pm

Sunday, March 20:  10am – 10pm

Monday – Friday, March 21 – 25:  9am – 10pm

Saturday, March 26:  9am – 10pm

Sunday, March 27:  10am – 12am

For future Library hours, be sure to check our daily calendar which can be found on the Library homepage, in the lower right corner.

Enjoy your spring break!

Show more
03/07/2016
profile-icon BLS Reference Desk
No Subjects

ebookslaptop2

The Library has hundreds of electronic books (E-Books) available in our collection.  They are on a wealth of law-related topics and are accessible through SARA, the library’s online catalog.  If you would like to learn how to find them, see examples of what we have and learn how to view or download them, please stop by the table on the first floor of the Library on Thursday, March 10th, 2016.  We will be there from 12:30pm to 2:00pm.  There will be e-book pens and chocolate candy for all those who stop by for a  demonstration.   See you there!

Show more
03/03/2016
profile-icon BLS Reference Desk
No Subjects

A Presidential Proclamation for Women’s History Month, 2016 states that “we remember the trailblazers of the past, including the women who are not recorded in our history books, and we honor their legacies by carrying forward the valuable lessons learned from the powerful.”

Rebels at the BarTo commemorate Women’s History Month, Brooklyn Law School Associate Librarian Linda Holmes has added some interesting titles in the display case on the first of the library opposite the elevator, including Rebels at the Bar: The Fascinating, Forgotten Stories of America’s First Women Lawyers by Jill Norgren (Call # KF367 .N67 2013). The book recounts the life stories of a small group of nineteenth century women who were among the first female attorneys in the United States. Beginning in the late 1860s, these pioneers, motivated by a love of learning, pursued the radical ambition of entering the then all-male profession of law. They desired recognition as professionals and the ability to earn a good living. One prominent early woman attorney was Belva Lockwood, born in New York State in the Niagara County town of Royalton on October 24, 1830. In 1879, a bill was passed in both houses of Congress and signed by President Rutherford B. Hayes allowing Lockwood to become the first woman to practice before the Supreme Court of the United States. On March 3, 1879, she became the first woman admitted to practice before the United States Supreme Court. One of her first actions was to nominate a black Southern colleague for admissions to the court.

In 1884, Lockwood was nominated for president of the United States by the National Equal Rights Party along with Harriet Stow as the vice presidential candidate. Running against James G. Blaine (Republican) and Grover Cleveland (Democrat) at a time when women were not allowed to vote, she received 4,194 votes. She ran for president again in 1888. Lockwood’s professional life focused on women’s rights and she helped women gain equal property rights and equal guardianship of children. She served as president of the Women’s National Press Association, commissioner of the International Peace Bureau in Berne, president of the White House chapter of the American Woman’s League, a senator for the District of Columbia Federal Women’s Republic, chairman of the committee on industrial police for the National Council for Women, and president of the National Arbitration Society of the District of Columbia. She died on May 19, 1917. In 1983 she was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame and on June 18, 1986, the United States Postal Service issued a memorial stamp. For more on Lockwood, see the entry at the New York State Library at this link.

Show more
03/01/2016
profile-icon Kathleen Darvil
No Subjects

As the victors for this Super Tuesday are decided, you Image result for presidential campaignmay want to learn more about the history and law of political campaigns in the United States. The library has several titles that may be of interest to you. Listed below are a select few. If you would like to see a complete list of the library’s titles on political campaigns in the United States, click on this link.

James A. Gardner, What are Campaigns for? The Role of Persuasion in Electoral Law and Politics (2009).

This Oxford University Press e-book includes chapters on the political campaign: emergence of the deliberative ideal; election law and the formation of public opinion; campaigns and the stability of political opinion; democratic theory and the thin election campaign; and the tabulative campaign.

Richard L. Hansen, Plutocrats United: Campaign Money, the Supreme Court, and the Distortion of American Elections (2016).

In this newly released Yale University Press publication, Hansen argues that both sides are not addressing the key issue of the Citizens United era: the necessity of balancing political inequality with free speech. Topics covered in this book include: the corruption distortion, the voting lottery, and the new media.

Kirsten A. Foot & Steven M. Schneider, Web Campaigning (2006).

Having an effective social media campaign is essential for modern campaigns. Topics covered in this MIT Press title on web campaigns include web campaigning implications and practices, tracing practices within a web sphere, and explaining the adoption of web campaign practices.

Regina G. Lawrence & Melody Rose, Hillary Clinton’s Race for the Whitehouse: Gender, Politics, and the Media on the Campaign Trail (2010).

It might be interesting to look back on Secretary Clinton’s first campaign for President and compare it with her second.   Chapters in this title include women and presidential politics, the media and the path to the Whitehouse, Hillary Clinton in context, and Clinton’s gender strategy.

Show more
Provided email address is invalid.
Field is required.
Field is required.