Law MLIS Program
The Law MLIS program is designed to prepare lawyers to serve as law librarians in courts, federal and state units of government, law schools, corporations, and firms. Attorneys enrolled in the program will earn the Master of Library and Information Science (MLIS) degree with a Special Certificate in Law Librarianship after successful completion of 44 quarter credit hours.
The Law MLIS program delivers its curriculum in a traditional classroom setting and therefore is not available for students in online format. Likewise, the Law MLIS degree requirements (core curriculum, law librarianship courses, culminating experience paper/presentation, and directed fieldwork) differ from the residential and online MLIS programs. The program is a sequential 12 months, beginning in Autumn Quarter and ending the following Summer quarter. Although certain courses may be taken during the immediately preceding Summer quarter, the sequential nature of the Law MLIS program requires students to remain throughout the full 12-month period. The Law MLIS program follows the UW Academic Calendar. The academic calendar includes registration periods, dates of instruction, final examination schedules, and other important dates.
Degree Requirements
The average course load in the Law Librarianship Program is 12 credits per quarter. Ten credits per quarter is the minimum for students who need to meet certain financial aid requirements.
The Law Librarianship coursework consists of the core
MLIS Curriculum, Law Librarianship courses, and Directed Fieldwork, as outlined below for the 2009-2010 school year:
1. Core Curriculum (23 credits)
- LIS 500 The Information Life Cycle (2 credits)
- LIS 510 Information Behavior (4 credits)
- LIS 520 Information Resources, Services, and Collections (4 credits)
- LIS 530 Organization of Information and Resources (4 credits)
- LIS 550 Information in Social Context (4 credits, taken as an online course)
- LIS 587 (4 credits, fulfills the Information Technology core course for Law MLIS students)
2. Law Librarianship courses (17 credits)
- LIS 591 Legal Research I (3 credits)
- LIS 592 Legal Research II (3 credits)
- LIS 593 Selection and Processing of Law Library Materials (3 credits)
- LIS 594 Law Library Administration (4 credits)
- LIS 595 Current Issues in Law Librarianship (4 credits)
3. LIS 590
Directed Fieldwork (4 credits)
4. Law MLIS students culminating experience project will be a paper and presentation produced during spring quarter as part of LIS 595, Current Issues in Law Librarianship.
Law Library Intern Program
A unique experience offered by the Law MLIS Program is the Internship Rotation. This program provides students with the opportunity to gain valuable paid job experience during the school year while working in Reference Services, Access Services, and Technical Services Departments of
Marian Gould Gallagher Law Library or
King County Law Library in downtown Seattle. Although each internship varies, Law Library interns at Gallagher typically work ten hours per week.
The Intern Program gives Law MLIS students a first-hand look at professional practice as a law librarian. The Intern Program also encourages students to develop important mentoring relationships with members of the library staff, which may endure throughout their careers. Although the Intern Program is not required for graduation, students are strongly urged to take advantage of this invaluable practical opportunity. The Director of the Law MLIS program will assist in the arrangement and supervision of the Internship Rotation.
Law Librarianship Without the Law Degree
Not all law librarians are lawyers. In fact, less than 30% of all law librarians possess both the Juris Doctor (JD) degree and a Masters of Library and Information Science (MLIS) degree. In addition, currently, less than 20% of all law librarian jobs being filled require both degrees.
While the Law MLIS Program is designed to prepare lawyers to serve as law librarians, all of the courses in law librarianship (with the exception of LIS 595) are open to any student enrolled in the Residential MLIS program. In particular, we recommend taking Legal Research I, Legal Research II, Selection and Processing of Law Library Materials, and the Law Library Administration classes taught in the autumn, winter, spring and summer quarters respectively. In addition, fieldwork placement in a law library, especially if you have already taken the legal research classes, is highly recommended.
Because the Law MLIS courses are taught sequentially and can only be started in Autumn Quarter, interested residential MLIS students are urged to enroll in the Law MLIS course sequence beginning in the Autumn quarter of their first or second year of enrollment at the Information School.
Simply follow the normal instructions and deadlines associated with the
Residential MLIS program and note in your personal statement that you wish to take Law MLIS electives and your future goals in working in the field of Law Librarianship.
FAQs and Contact Information
For an overview of the program, please download the
Law Librarianship brochure, or for more information on the Law MLIS Program, read our
Frequently Asked Questions.
Check out the
Law Librarianship Alumni Newsletter and the
Law Librarianship site hosted by the Law School.
For more information on the history of law librarianship, and job and scholarship opportunities, see the
American Association of Law Libraries’ Education for a Career in Law Librarianship and
Law Librarianship at the University of Washington.
For further information, contact Penny Hazelton, Director of the Law MLIS Program, by phone at 206-543-4089 or by e-mail at
pennyh@washington.edu. Professor Hazelton serves as faculty advisor to all Law MLIS students.