Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
The annotations or information you provide for each resource or research tool should be brief. In
other words, you want to quickly give your reader a reason to bother with this particular source.
If it is a major work, case, statute, etc., an annotation of several paragraphs may be warranted. It
is also worth mentioning that your Research Guide/Pathfinder should be usable several years from
now. Therefore, you may wish to limit the cases, books, articles, etc., which you list to
"landmark" items, with an emphasis on how you found them (i.e., which topic and key numbers
did you use in the digest, which subject headings in the catalog, which index terms, etc.). Indicate
in your annotations how these resources would be used to perform critical legal analyses of the
issues in your topic.
Miscellaneous Items
You may also consider including:
1. People: local and national experts, authors, practitioners, and be sure to tell how you found
them (i.e., which directories you used, etc.).
2. Associations: which ones are pertinent to your subject area (e.g., the ABA, ACLU, AALS, etc.)
and how did you find them.
3. Databases, blogs and websites: .org sites, .edu sites, .gov sites, .com sites (ONLY if
appropriate) among others.
4. Other Libraries with major or specialized collections.
5. Legal Newsletters or other publications.
6. Charts: Use charts or other visual aids including PowerPoint if that makes the presentation of
certain information clearer.