Website collection - University of Virginia School of Law
Filter Online content
Access and use
- Location of collection:
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Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections LibraryUniversity of VirginiaP.O. Box 400110160 McCormick RdCharlottesville, Virginia 22904-4110
- Contact for questions and access:
- POC: Brenda GunnEmail: bg9ba@virginia.eduPhone: (434) 924-1037Phone: (434) 243-1776Fax: (434) 924-4968
- Restrictions:
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The materials in this collection have no access restrictions.
- Terms of access:
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Because of the nature of this collection, copyright status varies across the materials. Copyright is assumed to be held by the original creators of the content. The University may grant permission to publish or reproduce intellectual property it owns in the name of The Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia.
Collection context
Summary
- Extent:
- 656.966 Gigabytes
- Creator:
- University of Virginia. School of Law
- Language:
- English
Background
- Scope and content:
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This collection contains copies of the University of Virginia School of Law's public website. On this site, the School shares content that documents its work and the experiences of its students, faculty, staff, and alums. This includes statistics, policies, program descriptions, summaries of services, links to affiliated organizations, news articles, videos, directories, marketing materials, short histories, and published research. While the website potentially reaches a broad audience, much of it is designed especially for the Law School's students, faculty, staff, and alums. Other content markets the School to applicants, donors, and employers.
- Acquisition information:
- Archivists at the Arthur J. Morris Law Library capture and archive the website annually.
- Appraisal information:
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The websites archived in this collection are not identical copies of the original sites. Instead, they are close representations shaped by the appraisal decisions of archivists.
Archivists strive to capture copies of the School of Law website that are identical to the originals. However, to overcome technological limitations and to allow for sustainable preservation, archivists make appraisal decisions that result in the creation of representative copies that function and look different from the originals. For example, when the website is too large to crawl and preserve as a single resource, archivists divide it into facets and crawl each part separately.
- Accruals:
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The Arthur J. Morris Law Library expects to add materials to this collection.
- Rules or conventions:
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard