[blindlaw] Question about a law book

William T. Miller william_t_miller at hotmail.com
Fri Jan 11 19:32:34 UTC 2013


You could also try to get an accessible version through the university's
office for disability services. When I was in law school I purchased the
books, then provided the receipt to the university. The university contacted
the publisher, and the publisher usually provided a PDF of the text on a
CD-ROM. A university the size of Penn State surely has experience providing
this accommodation to blind students. 
Good luck,

Will Miller



-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Wick [mailto:wickps at gmail.com] 
Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2013 8:26 PM
To: Blind Law Mailing List
Subject: Re: [blindlaw] Question about a law book

Dear  Marcos,

With non-legal publishers (who published law-related books), I have
had good luck contacting the publishers directly, and providing any
evidence they asked for concerning course enrollment etc.. They then
sent a copy of the book in pdf on a CD.

Best of luck to you,

Paul

On 1/10/13, Marcos Rodrigues <mrodrigues81 at hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> Good evening all:
>
> I will be taking an online course at Penn State University at the end of
> this month and I am required to buy the following book:
> American Legal English, Lee, D.S., Hall, C., and Barone, S. M. (2007). 2nd
> Edition. The University of Michigan Press. ISBN: 978-0-472-03206-8.
>
> Does anybody know where I can purchase this book in an accessible formate?
>
> Any help will be much apreciated.
>
> Regards. 		 	   		
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