SAS_SPACE E-repository

IALS Community on SAS-SPACE E-Repository

IALS publishes material on SAS-SPACE , the School of Advanced Study's E-repository, for scholarly and archival purposes. Most materials are made available for use on a non-commercial basis. Collections in the IALS Community contain work by Institute Staff, Students, Visiting Fellows and associated legal scholars and specialist.

Search and browse the IALS Community on SAS-SPACE E-repository

Outline of the IALS Community on SAS-SPACE - IALS E-repository collections

Material about the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies
Documents describing the mission, history, activities and development plans of the Institute.

Work by IALS Staff
Preprint versions of articles written by IALS Staff.

Work by IALS Students
Dissertations (grade "distinction" and above) by IALS masters students. In development.

Work by IALS Fellows
In development.

Amicus Curiae
Published articles written by legal scholars and specialist for Amicus Curiae: journal of the Society for Advanced Legal Studies.

IALS Lectures: In development.

IALS Projects:
Project documentation and working materials from collaborative projects with which IALS is or has been involved.

  • BAILII (British and Irish Legal Information Institute)
  • FLAG (Foreign Law Guide) Project
  • FLARE (Foreign Legal Research) Project
  • Intute: Law

Subject Collections: In development.

Law Librarianship:
Articles, research guides, training presentations by IALS Library Staff
Legislative Drafting

Material from Professional associations: In development.

Articles from professional association + society journals with which IALS has a connection: In development.

Those who contribute items to SAS-SPACE retain author copyright in their work but are asked to grant two licences. One is a licence to the School of Advanced Study of the University of London, enabling us to reproduce the item in digital form, so that it can be made available for access in the repository. The terms of the licence which you are asked to grant to the University for this purpose are as follows:-

'I grant to the University of London the irrevocable, non-exclusive royalty-free right to reproduce, distribute, display, and perform this work in any format including electronic formats throughout the world for educational, research, and scientific non-profit uses during the full term of copyright including renewals and extensions.'

The other licence is for the benefit of those who wish to make use of items stored in the e-repository. For this purpose we would like to use a Creative Commons licence (http://www.creativecommons.org.uk/) allowing others to download your works and share them with others as long as they mention you and link back to your entry in SAS-SPACE, but they can't change them in any way or use them commercially.