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The University of Wisconsin Law School is the law school of the University of Wisconsin–Madison, a public research university in Madison, Wisconsin. Founded in 1868, the school is guided by a " law in action " legal philosophy which emphasizes the role of the law in practice and society.
1893 Engraving of the University of Wisconsin School of Law's building. The law building is located on Bascom Hill on the University of Wisconsin–Madison campus, at 975 Bascom Mall, Madison, Wisconsin. The University of Wisconsin Law School offers two major programs and one doctorate program to the almost 800 students that make up the student ...
The Legislative Reference Library was a first-of-its-kind Progressive Era innovation which sought to utilize the expertise of the University of Wisconsin and the resources of Wisconsin's state law library to improve the quality and consistency of the lawmaking process in the Legislature.
A view of UW Health University Hospital, the Health Sciences Learning Center (HSLC), and the Wisconsin Institutes for Medical Research rising above Lake Mendota, on the western edge of the UW–Madison campus. The University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, housed in the HSLC, accounts for 40% of UW–Madison's research grants ...
Spencer L. Kimball – dean of law, University of Wisconsin–Madison and former professor of law, University of Chicago; James E. Krier – professor of law at the University of Michigan, Harvard University, Oxford University, Stanford University, and UCLA [5] Stacy Leeds – dean of the University of Arkansas School of Law [6]
In 2010, it acquired Highsmith, another library vendor rival, from W. W. Grainger, Inc. [9] Looking to provide services beyond library supplies and furniture, DEMCO acquired Evanced Solutions, a library software company in 2011. [10]
The introduction of the internet and current technology meant that the relevancy of a physical repository became less important. Concerns shifted to the impact of globalization initiatives such as the financial industry, policy sector research, development of advanced information and text processing software applications to serve the for-profit research industry. [2]
The Library stayed in the City Hall until 1906, when it moved into a new Carnegie library building that included a library school on the second floor until 1938 when the school became part of the University of Wisconsin–Madison and moved to the University. In 1965, the Central Library moved to its current location at 201 West Mifflin Street.