[blindlaw] Getting Practice Books for Offline Reading

Singh, Nandini NSingh at cov.com
Wed Mar 27 15:51:12 UTC 2019


Other than requesting your firm to scan in a treatise, I am not sure that I am aware of accessible, offline equivalents.

To your second question, I work in white collar criminal defense, and I know that we often consult the two-volume ABA treatise on privilege and work product, which is on Lexis. We also spend plenty of time in the DOJ USAM that has been revised and renamed to the Justice Manual.

-----Original Message-----
From: BlindLaw [mailto:blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Kelby Carlson via BlindLaw
Sent: Wednesday, March 27, 2019 11:33 AM
To: blindlaw at nfbnet.org
Cc: Kelby Carlson
Subject: [blindlaw] Getting Practice Books for Offline Reading

All,

Have any of you found avenues for getting standard practice books in
accessible formats that can be read offline and not just in Westlaw or
Lexis? I am speaking of actual practice books such as West's Standard
Practice by state, not hornbooks better suited for law school. It
would be very helpful to have at least some resources like this that I
can use without the internet. I have not had luck finding them on
Bookshare.

Currently I work in the criminal field. Are there any particular
treatises for practice anyone in that field has found indispensable?



-- 
Kelby Carlson

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