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[[Clicklaw Wikibooks]] are collaboratively developed, plain language legal publications that are published and kept up-to-date on a wiki, where they can also be printed. They are free to | [[Clicklaw Wikibooks]] are collaboratively developed, plain language legal publications that are published and kept up-to-date on a wiki, where they can also be printed. They are free to download and share with British Columbians who seek reliable, up-to-date information to address legal problems or learn about the law. [[Courthouse Libraries BC]] launched Clicklaw Wikibooks in 2012, and the program relies on the guidance of our [[:Category:Clicklaw Wikibooks Advisory Committee|Advisory Committee]], which includes contributor organizations and other stakeholders from the legal and library community. | ||
==About Clicklaw Wikibooks== | ==About Clicklaw Wikibooks== | ||
Clicklaw Wikibooks are | Clicklaw Wikibooks cover a variety of BC legal topics using plain language so people don't need legal training to understand them. They are available in print and digitally, and range in size from small booklets to 1,000+ page manuals. They are ''collaboratively developed'' in the sense that many different [[:Category:Contributor Bio|legal professionals]] and [[:Category:Contributor Organizations|law-related non-profit organizations]] contribute content and help keep it accurate, while [[Courthouse Libraries BC]] manages the platform and helps recruit volunteer authors and reviewers. Many titles in the [[Contents|Clicklaw Wikibooks collection]] were originally print publications or even stand-alone websites that were redone as Clicklaw Wikibooks to ensure the legal information is: | ||
*highly accessible ''both'' online and in print, | *highly accessible ''both'' online and in print, | ||
*accurate and up-to-date, and | *accurate and up-to-date, and | ||
*affordable to produce and maintain. | *affordable to produce and maintain. | ||
A significant factor in determining whether a printed legal resource is ''accessible'' is whether it is publicly available in libraries. For this reason, we work closely with public libraries through. | |||
Clicklaw Wikibooks | Clicklaw Wikibooks help solve two central challenges with publishing legal information: | ||
#'''Law is constantly evolving:''' It can be cumbersome and time consuming to keep a legal publication up-to-date using the traditional book publishing model. A wiki is easy to update without emailing versions back and forth between author, editor and reviewer. The wiki platform has a robust version history and comparison feature, and changes made are instantly available to readers. | |||
#'''It's hard to offer multiple formats of a resource''' An up-to-date website can be excellent, but rarely is it also available in print or to read offline—and there are many for whom computers or the internet are simply not accessible. On the other hand, information in purely printed form is comparatively costly to produce and share, and it does not get spread as quickly or as widely as internet-based forms. Clicklaw Wikibooks lets authors and law-related non-profit organizations edit their content in a single place. Meanwhile the platform automatically generates multiple formats. PDF and EPUB files are generated for printing or off-line reading, and users can order the book by mail at the cost of print-on-demand. | |||
For more on Clicklaw Wikibooks, see the [[Clicklaw Wikibooks FAQ]]. | For more on Clicklaw Wikibooks, see the [[Clicklaw Wikibooks FAQ]]. |