Winter is Coming – and so are Gale Product Enhancements!

Most of us are familiar with the vast array of Gale products. As vendors continue to update and streamline their products to make them more user-friendly, Gale has started a roll-out of enhancements as well. Phase one was completed earlier this year, and phase two, which affects such law collections as The Making of Modern Law: American Civil Liberty and the U.S. Declassified Documents Online, is slated to roll out this month (as of this posting, the rest of The Making of Modern Law collections are still TBD). Enhancements in these roll-outs include improved search results (with better faceting and filtering); a new Explore panel to upgrade the search experience, with tools such as a “More Like This” article suggester; and updated product names — for example, LegalTrac received its upgrade in July 2019, and is now Gale OneFile: LegalTrac.

To learn more about these enhancements, access a timeline of when each Gale product will receive the enhancements, and get a sneak preview, check out the Gale Product Enhancement site.

New, Notable, and Fun: Recent Finds from GPO and LOC

Government websites can be a boon of (free!) information for legal research. For today’s post, I thought I’d highlight a few news items and a few fun finds from the Library of Congress and the GPO.

New: GPO Director

Earlier this week, the Senate confirmed Hugh Halpern as the new Director of the Government Publishing Office. Halpern has held a variety of positions on Capitol Hill over the past 30 years, including Director of Floor Operations for the Speaker of the House. You can read more about Halpern in the GPO’s press release.

Congress.gov Enhancements

In November, Congress.gov added two new enhancements: First, for Senate amendments to bills, you can now see a list of any withdrawn co-sponsors. Second, in an effort to increase accessibility, Congress.gov has made improvements to their search results to make them easier to read for screen readers. You can see all the latest Congress.gov enhancements here.

Notable: CRS Reports on Congress.gov

We reported on this feature in September 2018, but in case you missed it, you can now access a large collection of Congressional Research Service reports through Congress.gov ( https://crsreports.congress.gov/). My favorite way to access the CRS reports on this site is to hit the search button without entering any search terms. This brings you to the index of CRS reports, so you can see the variety of subjects covered. Did you know the Law Library of Congress also creates research reports for Congress? You can access their reports as well, from the Law Library of Congress website.

Just for Fun: Library of Congress’ Free to Use and Reuse Collection

The Library of Congress has digitized large numbers of items in their collections, and have created a Free to Use and Reuse page, where you can browse these digitizations by category. Some collections, such as Veterans, Presidential Inaugurations, or Women’s History Month, might be more relevant to law libraries; myself, I’m partial to the Dogs collection (don’t worry – there’s a Cats one too). Perhaps the best collection here is the Not an Ostrich collection, named after this photo:

“Not an Ostrich” – https://www.loc.gov/resource/ppmsca.40935/

These are just a few of the new and notable finds from the GPO and the Library of Congress. Do you have your own favorite features? Please share!