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Don't Burn the Books, Read Them!

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 2018

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Abstract

Why do we still have books? To answer this question with views based not on the market trend, nor on the popular feeling that print is outdated and irrelevant, but on the American Bar Association's stated mission of Law Libraries to provide resources that enable legal education,1 this article reviews the potential benefits and determents of different types of legal sources using both print and online formats and discusses whether external pressures should outweigh these factors dependent on the audience.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2018 

“There are worse crimes than burning books. One of them is not reading them.”Footnote 2

Introduction

“Why do we have all these books?” Early in the Fall of my first year as Director of the O'Quinn Law Library at the University of Houston Law Center, my Dean asked me this question. He explained he had toured an alumna through the library from a local, large law firm, and they had posed the question to him.

The University of Houston Law Center holds just over 280,000 print volumes.Footnote 3 While our neighbor's collection in Austin, the University of Texas Tarlton Law Library, dwarves ours with its over one million print volumes,Footnote 4 our count is comparable to other academic law libraries in Texas.Footnote 5 Yet, even small print collections like ours are often questioned as to their relevance or currency.Footnote 6

Administrators tend to assume electronic resources are cheaper and superior for learning.Footnote 7 Some legal decision makers have gone so far as to say law print collections are “going the way of the Walkman, Betamax players and 35-millimeter cameras.”Footnote 8 “What matters most to law schools? Going forward, it will not be law libraries,” said former Law Library Director, law professor and digital media expert at the University of Buffalo School of Law, James Milles.Footnote 9 Other factors are undoubtedly at play, but our physical collections are at the heart of this prediction.Footnote 10

Indeed, conversion and use of digital sources has been a constant since the advent of personal computers in the 1990s.Footnote 11 Barely one decade ago, the introduction of portable screen reading devices prompted an explosion of eBooks.Footnote 12 eBook sales rose 354 percent in 2008 alone.Footnote 13

Legal research mirrored these trends to a large extent. In 1973, the Mead Data Center introduced LEXIS, a digital service that provided some state and federal codes and cases.Footnote 14 By the late 1970s, robust discussions of online legal research were happening in the law library world.Footnote 15 West Publishing introduced a product called InstaCite in the mid-1980s, which would eventually become KeyCite, now an integral part of the Westlaw platform.Footnote 16 In 1980, Mead Data Central (the then maker of Lexis) reported just below five million dollars in revenue.Footnote 17 Electronic publishing represented only 3 percent of their holdings at that time, which included a large paper manufacturing business.Footnote 18 After the e-boom, Reed Elsevier, current parent company to LexisNexis, reported the equivalent of 2.5 billion dollars in U.S. revenue.Footnote 19 By 2008, Thomson Reuters, owner of Westlaw, reported 90 percent of its over 13 billion dollars in revenue were in electronic media.Footnote 20

But even if digital media is the leader of the market does that mean it is or should be leader of our collections? In the past decade, law librarians have turned to digital collections because of factors like budget cuts and pricing, rather than relying on professional preference for learning impact.Footnote 21 Librarian and lecturer Jeanne Holba Puacz quotes librarian and digital pioneer Kathy Niemeier, “[i]t is a ‘mistake…to assume the need for information is finite and that it can be fully satisfied in any single medium.’ There are pros and cons to each format.”Footnote 22 Since the advent of online legal research services, law libraries of all types have investigated and weighed the features of print and online sources.Footnote 23 But research indicates that while digital is the market leader, it has not necessarily earned that position through intention, and as such may not be best for our students.

The ABA standards dictate a “law school shall maintain a law library that: provides support through expertise, resources, and services adequate to enable the law school to carry out its program of legal education, accomplish its mission, and support scholarship and research…”Footnote 24

Why do we have all these books? I seek to answer this question based not on the market trend, nor on the popular feeling that print is outdated and irrelevant, but on the ABA's stated mission of Law Libraries to provide resources that enable legal education. This article will review the potential benefits and determents of different types of legal sources using both print and online formats. By diving into scientific study, many issues are revealed concerning digital and print media. Those issues are taken in turn below.

Benefits and Detriments

Preference

Do students prefer electronic format? Dr. Diane Mizrachi from UCLA says “[c]ontrary to popular stereotype, surveys for more than a decade show that [students] consistently prefer reading their academic texts in print.”Footnote 25 Even if it was somehow preferred, should we as librarians care about student preference? Students might not like to take required courses or have a grade scale that averages to a grade other than an A+, but we are certainly comfortable taking these decisions out of their hands. Why then should their perceived preference dictate our library holdings? It should certainly influence decision-making, but not dictate it. After all, “[h]umans in general are poor judges of how much they know.”Footnote 26

Performance

Studies have shown generally that format of study materials and textbooks are not the driving factor in overall student performance on examinations.Footnote 27 Drs. Daniel and Woody created a study where students read on various mediums and found study environment and overall student GPA to be more significant contributors to success than media.Footnote 28 It is interesting to note, however, in a similar study by Drs. Ji, Michaels, and Waterman, where participants were given either print or electronic readings for a course, the students using print resources had a felt sense they performed better when using print.Footnote 29

When studies focused on reading comprehension not just grade performance, lower comprehension of material has been found when it is presented in digital format.Footnote 30 Drs. Mangen, Walgermo, and Brønnick, studied students’ reading comprehension among formats, allowing them to refer back to the format assigned. “Subjects who read the texts on paper performed significantly better than subjects who read the texts on the computer screen.”Footnote 31 Document navigation may play a role in this, specifically negative effects of scrolling.Footnote 32 Drs. Morineau, Blanche, Tobin, and Guéguen's study found that the media itself presents or obscures context clues that can help or hinder performance.Footnote 33 In that study, students were presented with various texts and their performance was tested on multiple variables.Footnote 34

A study consisting of an entire credit course based in either electronic or print format by Drs. Lauterman and Ackerman showed basic reading comprehension across formats may differ based on the information processing strategy at hand, superficial or deep understanding.Footnote 35 They conclude “the natural learning process tends to be shallower on screen than on paper.”Footnote 36 Drs. Baron, Calixte, and Havewala, measured student impressions about print and digital media, and found that with longer texts readers show a preference for print, while shorter texts show no reader preference between formats.Footnote 37 Lauterman and Ackerman's study found “60% of the participants stated that they would print the text for thorough learning.”Footnote 38 Mizrachi's survey found “more respondents preferred scholarly monographs in print…electronic versions for conference proceedings.”Footnote 39 In librarian Nancy Foasberg's qualitative study, students consistently recorded print as favorable for “long form and academic reading.”Footnote 40 This type of association with “shallow” learning and reading on screen is consistent.Footnote 41 Drs. Farinosi, Lim, and Roll, created a survey of students to determine their habits and preferences in uses of print and electronic reading formats.Footnote 42 A student reported “[i]f the text is pleasant and short, the digital support is preferred. If the text requires strategic reading, such as papers, essays, books, the paper version is preferred.”Footnote 43

Since performance isn't directly tied to either media, neither gets a win in this category, though print does edge out electronic for long format reading comprehension.

Time Consumption

Studies on time consumption are more conclusive. Students reading electronic media in the Daniel study took longer to complete readings than peers reading the same material in print.Footnote 44 This is a clear win for print media. These results held true whether reading in a formal study space or casually at home.Footnote 45

Multi-Tasking

A student in the Baron study reported “reading in hardcopy makes me focus more on what I am reading.”Footnote 46 The ability to concentrate is often discussed in studies about digital formats. In Baron's study, 91.8 percent of participants self-identified print as allowing easier concentration.Footnote 47 Farinosi concluded that because print has no added features, it requests the sole focus of the reader.Footnote 48 One of the participants noted “[a] paper book really allows you to focus on the task in hand; there is no temptation to quickly check emails, etc.”Footnote 49

These self-identifications are borne out by the Daniel study, showing participants reading in digital formats were more likely to respond to digital messages or use social media than those using print formats.Footnote 50 Again, one of Farinosi's participants commented “reading on screen creates a disconnection.”Footnote 51

In Mangen's study, even features intended to increase understanding were shown to hinder performance.Footnote 52 A study designed to test cognitive effects of hypertext features by Drs. DeStefano and LeFevre showed hyperlinks in texts increase mental load and processing, which limits reading performance.Footnote 53 These studies show a win for print media when multi-tasking is to be avoided.

Annotation

Mizrachi found “[h]ighlighting and annotating are behaviors that reflect active engagement with a text in an effort to learn and retain information.”Footnote 54 Baron concludes print is preferred by most, noted to be easier to annotate or underline.Footnote 55 Drs. Norman and Furnes ran a study varying exposure to print and various electronic media.Footnote 56 There is some evidence from this study that note-taking improves learning.Footnote 57 The study showed that participants annotate print more often than those who use electronic reading.Footnote 58

Along with making marks, Farinosi noted indicators of where users are in a text give print an advantage.Footnote 59 Actually understanding their progress makes a difference cognitively and helps participants retain information.Footnote 60 Annotation is another win for print reading.

Eyestrain

“[N]ot good for the eyes,” said one participant in Baron's study about using digital screens.Footnote 61 In fact, 45.5 percent of participants surveyed in Baron's study chose issues around eyestrain as the least liked feature of digital reading among dozens of physical, emotional, cognitive, and convenience features.Footnote 62 Mangen found that “[c]haracteristics of the computer screen (refresh rate, high levels of contrast and fluctuating luminance) interfere with cognitive processing for long-term memory.”Footnote 63 In addition to other negative factors, participants in the Wästlund study self-reported “higher levels of stress and fatigue than those who read paper.”Footnote 64 Again, a win is scored for print.

Environmental Sustainability

One interesting facet of studying print and digital media, is that often students may prefer digital media but ultimately choose to print out the media to read as noted in the Ji study.Footnote 65 More often than actual books, this is cited by students to be irresponsible environmentally.Footnote 66 One of Baron's participants says “[w]hile I prefer reading things in Hardcopy, I can't bring myself to print out online material simply for the environmental considerations.”Footnote 67 This is a complicated finding, indicating a possible win for electronic reading as to sustainability, but not a clear loss for print as long as the student was using a book and not printing out a digital copy.

Ease of Discovery

This is most certainly a win for electronic formats.Footnote 68 “By the 1960s, there was much talk in the legal profession about the geometric rate of increase in the amount of material a lawyer had to scan to do a comprehensive job of legal research.”Footnote 69

“[S]tudents and academic researchers often turn to Google Scholar to conduct their initial scholarly searches, instead of library catalogs and…databases” because of what one scholar calls “Google fluency.”Footnote 70 This preference persists among legal researchers.Footnote 71 LexisAdvance and WestlawNext provide Google-like electronic databases for lawyers.Footnote 72 Library catalogs and other databases have made attempts to come more into Google-like discovery, but have not been able to find the right mix. For instance, at the University of Houston Law Center, a recent survey of students revealed that 47.75 percent of students never used the online catalog, while the same students took time to write comments praising the areas of the print collection that were arranged outside traditional call number schemes.Footnote 73

Ease of Delivery

Print takes another loss here, as studies show lack of convenience in getting print as a determent of the format.Footnote 74 The same studies show access to materials and convenience among the highest attributes of digital formats.Footnote 75 Students show a great preference for digital materials that are easy to download, choosing a PDF option when offered.Footnote 76

Perception

In a study to measure e-book use across academic disciplines, one student wrote “end of print books = end of civilization.”Footnote 77 As noted above in the Ji study, students perceive their own understanding to be higher when they use print.Footnote 78 Again, Farinosi, “[s]tudents … feel that reading on screen creates a disconnection with the content and paper seems to allow readers to immerse themselves in the content better which improves learning.”Footnote 79

Outside Factors

We consider these factors not only for the library, but for the student.

Budget

It was found that 86.9 percent of participants in Baron's study preferred print for academic reading if the cost to them was the same.Footnote 80 A student from Mizachi's study claims “[i]f they were the same cost I would prefer the paper version…”Footnote 81

Law book prices have risen steeply over the past decades. In 1998 the annual cost for an average reporter was $856.21.Footnote 82 By 2014, the cost was $9,121.18.Footnote 83 Law library budgets have been flat or declined over the same time period.Footnote 84 Law libraries responded by cutting print collections, as early as 2008.Footnote 85 For instance, Yale answered the price increases by cancelling almost all of the print reporters before 2012.Footnote 86

Meanwhile, academic libraries generally have both Westlaw and LexisNexis, and present these tools to students at no additional cost.Footnote 87 In contrast, eBook costs generally fall directly on students, as few law libraries pay for patron access to eBooks.Footnote 88 Electronic aids are sometimes paid for by the library, but not generally.Footnote 89

Space

Students report in Baron's study a preference for the convenience of storing books digitally.Footnote 90 “[E]lectronic textbooks means I do not have to carry it,” a participant in Mizarchi's study notes.Footnote 91 Farinosi's study disagrees, finding that print is easier physically because it isn't tied to power or location, you can pick it up and take it anywhere to use.Footnote 92

Considering Audiences

As we move toward conclusion, it is important to note the difference in audiences. My Dean was asked a question by a large law firm partner. Certainly the day-to-day needs of a partner are different than the average law student.

For instance, lawyers need to research under certain circumstances that force a large digest of information on tight deadlines.Footnote 93 Studies have shown that lawyers create something akin to a precedent map in their minds as they work.Footnote 94 This differs from the general needs of law students who have a prepared reading list at the beginning of the semester and work systematically on deep understanding of those readings.

A student working outside doctrinal courses is still likely to have more time than a practicing attorney. Chancellor notes that lawyers “prefer to receive their information within thirty minutes.”Footnote 95 For a student writing a brief, paper, or even performing a research exercise, hours, days, weeks, or even months of time are given for completion.

And even after we consider these differences, it has been asserted many times that law students don't have the skills necessary for basic law practice.Footnote 96 Noting we certainly need the tools practicing lawyers are using, we can also extrapolate that if the skills students gain in studying for doctrinal courses do not prepare them for practical legal research, we can safely conclude that practicing attorneys need different resources than students (at least insofar as their needs for doctrinal courses.)

Technology Gaps

One of the clearest advantages of electronic material is the speed with which it can be accessed. However, a law firm librarian described sending and resending a link to a material that continued to expire while the lawyer who needed the material tried to find time to access it.Footnote 97 This demonstrates that mode of electronic delivery is an important factor when considering the possible advantages of electronic media.

Studies also show clear advantages to devices that use reflecting light not emitting light.Footnote 98 Since studies show students generally use laptops when reading digital media, perhaps librarians should nudge students towards screens that do not use LCD.

Conclusion

Almost 150 years ago a sales man thought American case law should be indexed differently.Footnote 99 That man, John West, created what has morphed into Westlaw.Footnote 100 The Ohio Bar Association thought the cases and codes they needed should be online, Lexis endorsed that, and now entire categories of legal research are almost always performed online.Footnote 101 Firms facing budget and space issues are discarding their print collections.Footnote 102

As academic law librarians wait for word shift in ABA guidance as to if and how much print we have to keep, we all seek answers to the same questions. Do we have books? Yes, most of us will probably have books. How many? I'm not sure that is a metric worth pursuing. As Whiteman says, “one size does not fit all.”Footnote 103 Surely there will always be giant print collections, but they also will certainly become less frequent as new buildings are built, libraries continue to invest in collaborative holdings, and the legal market continues to change. It seems a better practice to truly consider the needs of our individual programs of scholarship and education and make our own decisions accordingly. Below are my recommendations.

Primary Sources

Primary resources are not needed in print and should only be kept in certain, specific circumstances. Most current primary sources are held digitally for free by the government sources that produce them.Footnote 104 They are also held in many fee-based digital platforms.Footnote 105 LIPA and NELLCO have created a pilot project called PalmPrint to create a shared print repository of U.S. primary sources.Footnote 106

The pros of digital format shine with primary sources. Premium discovery is key as the sheer amount of sources soar. Most of these materials do not require lengthy reading times or a particularly deep information processing strategy. When they do, they are often available for instant download in PDF. For instance, Westlaw provides almost all of their West Reporter cases in PDF images.Footnote 107 Even those that aren't available this way can be downloaded or printed to PDF in dual column format that mimics the traditional print format.Footnote 108

Secondary Sources

If possible, good secondary sources should be kept in both highly discoverable electronic format and easily arranged print. Discovery of electronic treatises can be tricky, making them less effective. Law libraries don't always include these titles in their catalogs, because they have to create or pay for catalog records and may have limited remedy if the resource link breaks or becomes outdated.Footnote 109 Within popular electronic databases, treatises are now shown in search results alongside other materials, with no indication of their value or importance.Footnote 110

It is also easy to consider how using a treatise online would be more impacted by scrolling or clicking issues. The Porion study found that participants who could flip through a text moved more quickly from page to page, while carrying a smaller cognitive load.Footnote 111 Meaning the reader would spend so much energy navigating the treatise, they would not have as many resources remaining to digest the material.

Shelf browsing and tradition classification are valued tools of librarians, but perhaps are not compelling for students.Footnote 112 While I personally feel adrift in the casual display at large bookstores, obviously the arrangement is working from a sales model.

In discovery, arrangement, and delivery, treatises should be given prominence and “sold” to our students. Once found, they should be easily available in print (by traditional means or otherwise) to enable students the best chance for deep understanding, while minimizing eyestrain and time to read.

Textbooks and Study Aids

Textbooks and study aids should be available in print for students. Research has shown that e-textbook sales have not met pace with other eBook sales.Footnote 113 The needs to annotate, and have deep understanding while avoiding eyestrain, pull for print. Discovery isn't much of an issue since textbooks are assigned and preferred study aids aren't voluminous in number. Delivery doesn't pose significant issues because need is well known and expected.

Should law libraries be in the business of providing text books and study aids in print? A review of top USNWR law libraries shows it is common for libraries to invest in study aids for students. Text books are a more split proposition. Some libraries specifically do not acquire textbooks.Footnote 114 As a practice, I have never encouraged purchasing textbooks. It is problematic because of expense, timeliness, and the difficulty in providing them in the right way and amount. However, the research supporting this article has caused me to ask for a study from our acquisitions and access teams as to the cost and methods of such an undertaking.

Answers

Clearly, technological advancements will continue to improve, and the findings here will change along with those advancements. I can easily imagine a virtual reality system where students can have the benefits of print with the ease of electronic discovery and delivery elaborate. But we aren't there yet. And frankly, we can't know what exactly the next decade will hold.

As law schools build new buildings, many academic law librarians perhaps find themselves evaluating their print collections in a different way as they are asked to scrutinize every square foot assigned to the library.

I believe law librarians should do what they can to innovate within their own collections and services now, to collaborate with their colleagues and be ready to change as technologies become available. I do not think we should discard our print collections only because we assume they won't be needed in the future. “You can never plan the future by the past.”Footnote 115

“Why do we have all these books?” Well, frankly, some we have because we have the space available to store them. If we don't have that space, we won't store them. Some we have because we have some sense of duty to collect certain materials in our jurisdiction and specialty areas. In the future, unless chosen as a repository for those collections, we won't store them. But some we have and will continue to have because they are an environmentally sustainable way to advance our mission of legal education and better serve our students. We have them because we think our students should read them.

Footnotes

**

© Amanda Watson 2018. The author is Director, John M. O'Quinn Law Library and Assistant Professor, University of Houston Law Center, Houston, Texas.

References

2 Joseph Brodsky, Independent on Sunday, May 19, 1991. (Spoken on acceptance of US poet laureateship, Washington DC.)

3 Report from ALLStar Benchmarking (on file with author). See http://www.nellco.org/page/allstar.

4 University of Texas, Tarlton Law Library/The Joseph D. Jamail Center for Legal Research at http://catalog.utexas.edu/general-information/libraries-and-other-academic-resources/legal-research-tarlton-law-library/.

5 Report from ALLStar Benchmarking (on file with author). See http://www.nellco.org/page/allstar.

6 See, e.g., Gorham, Ursula & Jaeger, Paul T., The Law School Library or the Library at the Law School? How Lessons from Other Types of Libraries Can Inform the Evolution of the Academic Law Library in the Digital Age, 109 Law Libr. J. 51, 52, 2017Google Scholar Law Libr. J. 2, ¶ 2.

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8 M. P. McQueen, The Bookless Library, Am. Law., July 2015, at 64.

9 Milles, James G., Legal Education in Crisis, and Why Libraries Are Doomed, 106 Law Libr. J. 507, 519, 2014Google Scholar Law Libr. J. 28, ¶ 40.

10 Id. at 517, ¶ 34.

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17 Mead Data Central, 1984 Annual Report 24 (1985).

18 Id. at 25.

19 Reed Elsevier, 2008 Annual Report 16 (2009).

21 See, e.g., Bob Wharburton, Libraries Around the Country Under Budget Pressure, Libr. J., June 28, 2013, https://lj.libraryjournal.com/2013/06/funding/libraries-around-the-country-under-budget-pressure.

22 Puacz, Jeanne Holba, Electronic vs. Print Reference Sources in Public Library Collections, 44 Reference Librarian 39, 50 (2005)CrossRefGoogle Scholar, quoting Niemeier, Kathy, The Medium Must Match the Message, 6 Ref. Librarian 217, 223 (2009)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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47 Ibid. at 596.

48 Farinosi, supra note 41, at 417.

49 Ibid.

50 Daniel, supra note 25, at 22.

51 Farinosi, supra note 41, at 418.

52 Mangen, supra note 29, at 61.

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55 Baron, supra note 10, at 592.

56 Norman, supra note 40, at 304.

57 Ibid. at 307.

58 Ibid.

59 Farinosi, supra note 41, at 417.

60 Ibid.

61 Baron, supra note 10, at 598.

62 Ibid. at 601.

63 Mangen, supra note 29, at 62.

64 Porion, supra note 26, at 570.

65 Ji, supra note 6, at 17.

66 Baron, supra note 10, at 592.

67 Baron, supra note 10, at 599.

68 Ibid. at 592.

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71 Ibid.

72 Ibid. at 86 ¶ 11.

73 University of Houston Law Center Library Student Survey (on file with author).

74 Baron, supra note 10, at 597.

75 Ibid. at 598.

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83 Ibid. at 363, Table 1.

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88 Ibid. at ¶ 32.

89 Ibid. at ¶ 34.

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91 Mizrachi, supra note 24, at 307.

92 Farinosi, supra note 41, at 417.

93 Chancellor, Renate, Getting It From the Source: What Librarians Think About Lawyer Search Behavior, 107 Law Libr. J. 287, 288, 2015Google Scholar Law Libr. J. 12 ¶ 2.

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100 Marks, supra note 69, at 84 ¶ 3.

101 Marks, supra note 98, at 384 ¶ 21.

102 McQueen, supra note 7, at 66.

103 Whiteman, supra note 83, at 26 ¶ 47.

104 Whiteman, supra note 83, at 29 ¶ 55.

105 Ibid.

106 PALMPrint, http://www.nellco.org/?page=palmprint. It is worth noting that in a recent casual poll of Texas Law Libraries, the majority of directors declined to investigate pooling resources in the University of Texas/Texas A&M Joint Library Facility. This was most commonly attributed to currently have the facility to store them. Amanda Watson, e-mail A&M/UT Joint Library Facility (on file with author).

107 Thomson Reuters, West Reporter Images, https://lawschool.westlaw.com/marketing/display/SO/18.

109 Randtke, supra note 81, at 377 ¶ 67.

110 Martin, Peter W., Possible Futures for the Legal Treatise in an Environment of Wikis, Blogs, and Myriad Online Primary Law Sources, 108 Law Libr. J., 7, 21, 2016Google Scholar Law Libr. J. 1 ¶ 33.

111 Porion, supra note 26, at 570.

112 Pat Parker, Automated Retrieval System Affects Legal Research: Is the Browsing Collection a Thing of the Past?, 7 AALL Spectrum 24, 25 (April 2003). Bowker, Geoffrey C. & Starr, Susan Leigh, Sorting Things Out: Classification and Its Consequences 7 (2000)Google Scholar.

113 National Associate of College Bookstores, Update: Electronic Book and eReader Device Report March 2011, http://www.nacs.org/LinkClick.aspx%3Ffileticket%3DuIf2NoXApKQ%253D%26tabid%3D2471%26mid%3D3210.

114 See, e.g., University of Cincinnati Libraries, Law Student Guide to the Law Library, http://guides.libraries.uc.edu/c.php?g=222405&p=1474094.

115 Edmund Burke, Letter to a Member of the National Assembly (1791).