Michael G. Moore wins 2012 Borgeson Award

MLIS Law student Michael Moore's paper, "Green with Envy, Not the 'Gold Standard in Legal Citation': Why the ALWD Citation Manual Should be Finally Relegated to a Footnote," received the 2012 Earl C. Borgeson Research in Law Librarianship Award. Moore's article will be published in the journal Legal Reference Services Quarterly. The honor carries a $1,000 prize.

The Borgeson award was established in 2000 to encourage scholarly research in the field of law librarianship. Each year students in Professor Penny Hazelton's Current Issues in Law Librarianship (CILL) class each write a major paper about an important contemporary topic affecting the profession; these papers are submitted to a panel of nationally-renowned law librarians who select the best piece.

The judges this year were Michael Chiorazzi, UW Law Librarianship (MLIS Law 1981), Director, Law Library and Professor of Law, University of Arizona College of Law Library; Richard Danner, Rufty Research Professor of Law and Senior Associate Dean for Information Services, Duke University's J. Michael Goodson Law Library; Marguerite Most, UW Law Librarianship (MLIS Law 1977), Reference Librarian and Senior Lecturing Fellow, Duke University's J. Michael Goodson Law Library.

Earl Borgeson, MLIS Law '49, served as president of the American Association of Law Libraries (1968-69) and was professor of law and librarian at Harvard Law School. He died in 2010.

Moore graduates from the iSchool this summer and will join the Lawton Chiles Legal Information Center at the University of Florida Levin College of Law as a reference librarian.