Tapping State Government Information Sources

Tapping State Government Information Sources
Author: Lori L. Smith
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 492
Release: 2003-11-30
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 0313072442

Each state government produces large varieties and quantities of useful information that are largely unknown outside their state of origin. This book leads the public to the most useful information sources produced by each state, as well as to depository libraries that will facilitate more effective research. For each of the 50 states, important publications are detailed, along with information on how to obtain them. The publications' topics range from crime statistics to vital statistics, business statistics, health information, statistical abstracts, education directories, state budgets, economic indicators, state laws and legal information, and more. Tapping State Government Information Sources has a broader focus than previously published books in this subject area, most of which have focused solely on depository laws, useful state publications, or indexes to state publications. This book covers all three. The first chapter describes print and electronic sources that provide information about all 50 states. Each state's resources are then described in individual chapters. When possible, information about how to order a copy of the source is given, as are Web addresses for titles that are available online. At the beginning of each state chapter, the state's legal definition of public document or its equivalent is given, which may be of interest to librarians in states that are reexamining their own depository laws.

The Authentic Constitution

The Authentic Constitution
Author: Arthur E. Palumbo
Publisher: Algora Publishing
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2009
Genre: Law
ISBN: 0875867073

In 2008, Alan Keyes, a Republican presidential candidate in 1996 and 2000, described the relationship between the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States in the following way: ""The doctrine of unalienable rights is to the Constitution what the laws of physics are to architecture or engineering. Those laws are not repeated in every plan or architect's drawing, but they are assumed and must be respected or the results will be defective and dangerous."" It is clear that the founding principles of the Declaration are intimately connected with the Constitution and it.