Keeping up with the law: investigating lawyers’ monitoring behaviour
Author:
Ellis Stephanie,Makri Stephann,Attfield Simon
Abstract
Purpose
– The authors wanted to provide an enriched understanding of how lawyers keep up-to-date with legal developments. Maintaining awareness of developments in an area (known as “monitoring”) is an important aspect of professional’s information work. This is particularly true for lawyers, who are expected to keep up-to-date with legal developments on an ongoing basis.
Design/methodology/approach
– The authors conducted semi-structured interviews with a group of lawyers who authored and published current awareness content for LexisNexis – a large publishing organisation. The interviews focused on identifying the types of electronic, printed and people-based current awareness resources the lawyers used to keep up-to-date with legal developments and the reasons for their choices.
Findings
– The lawyers mostly used electronic resources (particularly e-mail alerts and an electronic tool that alerted them to changes in website content), alongside interpersonal sources, such as colleagues, customers and professional contacts. Printed media, such as journals and newspapers, were used more rarely and usually to complement electronic and person-based resources. A number of factors were found to influence choice. These included situational relevance, presentation, utility and trustworthiness, the speed of content acquisition and interpretation facilitated by the resource.
Originality/value
– The authors' findings enrich their understanding of lawyers’ monitoring behaviour, which has so far received little direct research attention. Their design suggestions have the potential to feed into the design of new and improvement of existing digital current awareness resources. Their findings have the potential to act as “success criteria” by which these resources can be evaluated from a user-centred perspective.
Subject
Library and Information Sciences
Reference34 articles.
1. Attfield, S.
and
Blandford, A.
(2011), “Conceptual misfits in e-mail based current-awareness interaction”, Journal of Documentation, Vol. 67 No. 1, pp. 33-55. 2. Attfield, S.
,
Blandford, A.
and
Makri, S.
(2010), “Social and interactional practices for disseminating current awareness information in an organisational setting”, Information Processing and Management, Vol. 46 No. 6, pp. 632-645. 3. Bates, M.
(2002), “Towards an integrated model of information seeking and searching”, in
Wilson,
,
T.
,
Barrulas,
and
M.
(Eds), The New Review of Information Behaviour Research: Studies of Information Seeking in Context, Vol. 3, Taylor Graham, London, pp. 1-15. 4. Blandford, A.
,
Green, T.
,
Furniss, D.
and
Makri, S.
(2008), “Evaluating system utility and conceptual fit using CASSM”, International Journal of Human–Computer Studies, Vol. 66 No. 6, pp. 393-409. 5. Borgman, C.L.
,
Smart, L.J.
,
Millwood, K.A.
,
Finley, J.R.
,
Champeny, L.
,
Gilliland, A.J.
and
Leazer, G.H.
(2005), “Comparing faculty information seeking in teaching and research: implications for the design of digital libraries”, Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, Vol. 56 No. 6, pp. 636-657.
Cited by
9 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|