Votre recherche
Résultats 52 ressources
-
L'auteure examine la particularité des banques de données de législation européenne utilisant les exemples de N-Lex (prototype expérientiel au moment de la publication), EUR-Lex et EUROVAC (le thésaurus). L'auteure présente les difficultés apparentes de l'objectif à créer une banque de données suffisamment qui englobe toutes les législations européennes et nationales. - ES
-
C'est un ouvrage regroupant des articles portant sur les interactions entre humains et ordianteurs, ainsi que la recherche d'information.
-
Geraldine Beare explores the history of indexing from its very earliest days, through the invention of the alphabet and the concept of alphabetical order to today’s world of Google and the search engine.
-
The renaissance of interest in American legal history has been greatly aided by a variety of developments in the materials and methods of legal research. Legal history has become a new center of attention in American legal education and scholarship and has attracted similarly enhanced interest in university history departments. Fortunately, this comes at a time when increasingly sophisticated research techniques and sources are gaining wide acceptance in both the academic and legal communities. Professor Cohen surveys the effects of these advances on research in American legal history.
-
In revisiting their Stanford Law Review article, “Why Do We Tell the Same Stories: Law Reform, Critical Librarianship, and the Triple Helix Dilemma,” Professors Delgado and Stefancic contend that computer-assisted legal research has not proven to be a boon to the cause of law reform. At the time of the first article, the computer revolution, which irreversibly changed how we research legal questions, was just dawning. In this article, they focus again on categorical thinking, but this time...
-
Historically, the New Testament has been divided and organized in many ways. Some divisions, such as our modern chapters and verses, are merely cataloguing schemes, used to find passages quickly. Others, such as the Eusebian apparatus, served scholarly purposes. This document will briefly outline some of the methods used over the centuries and preserved in the manuscripts. In addition, it will describe some of the more common marginalia found in the manuscripts.
-
Helmut Zedelmaier explores the early encyclopaedia as knowledge management tool, and the part played in its development by the index, discusses the role of the printing press in the development of the index, asks why the index declined in the 18th century, and identifies topics for consideration when some future history of the book index comes to be written. This article was translated by Andrew Horne.
-
The recent ‘rediscovery’ of fragments of the alphabetical tables of the first Cartulary of the Collegiate Church of St Julian of Auvergne, compiled at the beginning of the 12th century, would seem to have introduced a new milestone into the general understanding of the history of indexing. This article looks briefly at the chronology of the use of alphabetical order in the West and the appearance of the first indexes; analyses the distinctive features of the Brivadois fragments; and finally,...
-
In this article Caroline Diepeveen explores the beginnings of the indexing tradition in Europe and considers to what extent that tradition has survived into contemporary practice there.
Explorer
Revue de littérature
Recherches connexes
Type de ressource
- Article de revue (22)
- Chapitre de livre (19)
- Livre (6)
- Page Web (3)
- Article de colloque (1)
- Rapport (1)