Text Only
Search

 
Website of the Week ¡X AltLaw

24 August 2007
Website of the Week: AltLaw 1.04MB (mp3) audio clip
Listen to Website of the Week: AltLaw 1.04MB (mp3) audio clip

Time again for our Website of the Week, when we showcase interesting and innovative online destinations.

In many countries, the law is defined by the statutes passed by parliament. In the United States, however, we follow the British-based Common Law system, where the decisions of judges who interpret the statutes ¡X caselaw, it's called ¡X can be just as important, if not more so.

For centuries, the cases were published in lawbooks that impressively decorate lawyers' offices. Today, though, are more likely to use privately-published online databases to find relevant cases. Those services are expensive, though, which means most people can't access them. Columbia University law professor Tim Wu aims to change that.

WU: "AltLaw.org is a different way of finding caselaw ¡X the nation's cases written by its judges. Now that may not sound like a big deal, but the truth is right now it's very hard to find the nation's caselaw."

AltLaw.org wants to bring that caselaw into an online, fully-searchable, free database.

WU: "Our target audience is the general public, lawyers who want to save money, academics and, you know, we don't really know what's going to happen with it. It's still very new and preliminary. It's not a full replacement yet, but it's a start."

AltLaw.org is still in its infancy, and the cases are limited to those published by the Supreme Court and other federal appeals courts for the past 10 years or so ¡X no lower courts, and no state courts, either, at least for now. To add those will be time consuming and expensive, but Prof. Tim Wu says he and his colleagues are inspired by the success of the free online encyclopedia Wikipedia.

WU: "No one thought there would be a non-commercial free encyclopedia that would be as good as or better than some of the other encyclopedias out there. And so our idea is, once you start something, who knows where it will go. And it's about time that the legal profession, which is always a traditional profession, sees some of the benefit of the information revolution."

Searchable court decisions for the rest of us at AltLaw.dot org, or get the link from our site, voanews.com.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Previous Websites of the Week
 
  Top Story
Obama Names Campaign Rival Hillary Clinton as His Secretary of State  Video clip available

  More Stories
Explosions Rock Baghdad and Mosul  Audio Clip Available
Mumbai Terror Attacks Heighten Tensions Between India, Pakistan  Audio Clip Available
Suicide Bomber Strikes in Pakistan
Suicide Bombing Kills 10 in Afghanistan
Israel Turns Back Libyan Ship Carrying Aid Supplies to Gaza
Zimbabwe's Cholera Epidemic Hits Home  Audio Clip Available
International Climate Change Forum Opens in Poland
Thai Anti-Government Protesters Focus on Airports  Audio Clip Available
SE Asian Nations Watching US Plans for Auto Industry  Audio Clip Available
S. Korea Expresses 'Deep Regret' About North's Border Clampdown  Audio Clip Available
Controversial Movie on Ataturk Stokes Debate in Turkey  Audio Clip Available
Effort in Senegal to Join Traditional & Conventional Medicine  Video clip available
Presidential Transition Process is Civil, Complex  Video clip available
UN Climate Chief Warns Against 'Cheap and Dirty' Power