Check your bookshelf!

Today, I checked the books on my bookshelves at work. I found 69 books. 9 of them are available in formats accessible to the reading disabled in the US and 1 is available to the print disabled worldwide.


I am looking for volunteers who are willing to do the same thing at home or at work. Let me know if you are interested.

Titles available on Bookshare for the US:

1. The Social Contract Rousseau
2. Black’Law Dictionary West
3. Database Nation Simson Garfinkel
4. Wild Swans Three daughters of China Jung Chang
5. The No 1 Ladies’ detective agency Alexander McCall Smith
6. Tracks Louis Erdrich
7. In dubious Battle john Steinbeck

8. Candide Voltaire
9. Civilization and its Discontents Freud
Title available on Bookshare Worldwide:
10. Notes from Underground Dostoyevsky

Titles not available on Bookshare:
1. Genetic engineering dream or nightmare Dr. Mae-Wan Ho
2. A manual of Style Gramercy
3. Aspects of Television regulation by Roger G. Noll

4. Digital copyright Jessica Litman
5. Human Rights and African Customary Law T.W. Bennett
6. Trade, Environment and sustainable development: Views from Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America ed. by Peider Konz
7. Democracy at Risk Jeff Gates
8. Silent theft David Bollier
9. The Judas Economy The Triumph of capital and the betrayal of work William Wolman and Anne Colamosca
10. Irreparable Harm Frank Snepp
11. Farmageddon Food and the culture of Biotechnology Brewster Kneen
12. Seducing the French The dilemna of americanization Richard Kuisel

13. The Choice for Europe Andrew Moravcsik
14. Television in Europe Eli Noam
15. Collective Intelligence Pierre Lévy
16. Migrations Milos Tsernianski
17. A history of Modern France Jeremy d. Popkin
18. The cultures of globalization Frederic Jameson and Masao Miyoshi
19. Native Americans, crime and Justice ed by Marianne O. Nielson and Robert A. Silverman
20. Blue Frontier David Helvarg
21. African magic heidi Holland

22. Making Global trade work for people UNDP
23. Intellectual Property needs and expectations of traditional knowledge holders WIPO Report
24. The right to privacy Ellen Alderman and Caroline Kennedy
25. Recolonization Gatt, the Uruguay Round and the third world Chakravarhi Raghavan
26. The No 1 Ladies’ detective agency Alexander McCall Smith
27. Africa in History Basil Davidson
28. Corporate predators Russel Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
29. Barcelona Robert Hughes

30. Le tartuffe Moliere
31. The Rough guide to the Bahamas Gaylord Dold, Natalie Folster and Adam Vaitilingam
32. Perpetual peace Kant
33. Propaganda, Inc Nancy Snow
34. The case against lameduck impeachment Bruce Ackerman
35. Globalizing civil society David c. Korten
36. Women pay more frances cera and Marcia Carroll
37. Born in Soweto heidi Holland
38. Zimbabwe Hwange

39. Broadcasting in America Head Sterling
40. Internet Governance Jovan Kurbalija and Eduardo Gelbstein
41. A manual of Roman law Peter Spiller
42. Persepolis Marjane Satrapi
43. The rough guide to Malaysia, Singapore & Brunei Charles de Ledesma, Mark Lewis and Pauline Savage
44. Competitive strategies for the protection of intellectual property Owen Lippert
45. Intellectual prperty rights, Trade and biodiversity Graham Dutfield
46. Nongovernmental politics Michel Feher Gaelle Krikorian and Yates Mckee

47. Trading in knowledge Christophe Bellman, Graham Duttfield and Ricardo Melendez-Ortiz
48. The wealth of Man Peter Jay
49. Photography: what’s the law? Robert M. Cavallo and Stuart Kahan
50. Intellectual property Miller Davis
51. Mass communications Law Zuckman Gaynes Carter Dee
52. Copyright Law Craig Joyce, Marshall Leaffer, Peter Jaszi Tyler Ochoa
53. Who rules the Net Thierer and Crews
54. The Cunning of Unreason John Dunn

55. The Norton Anthology of Modern poetry Ellmann O’Clair
56. Distance training Schreiber Berge
57. Gaveling down the rabble Jane Anne Morris
58. Regulation of broadcasting Ginsburg
59. Copyright, Patent, Trademark and related doctrine Goldstein

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