Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoK
Selected Works (114,783 en total)
- Federalista por Alexander Hamilton
- El Proyecto Williamsom por John Grisham
- Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption por Bryan Stevenson
- ACCION CIVIL por Jonathan Harr
- The Nine: Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court por Jeffrey Toobin
- The Witches: Salem, 1692 por Stacy Schiff
- Shh! We're Writing the Constitution por Jean Fritz
- If You Were There When They Signed the Constitution por Elizabeth Levy
- La Ley por Claude Frédéric Bastiat
- Por una cultura libre : cómo los grandes grupos de comunicación utilizan la tecnología y la ley para clausurar la cul por Lawrence Lessig
- The Five Thousand Year Leap: 28 Great Ideas that Changed the World por W. Cleon Skousen
- Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg por Irin Carmon
- Constitution of the United States {Barnes and Noble Study Edition} por Founding Fathers
- The Brethren: Inside the Supreme Court por Bob Woodward
- El regreso de Martin Guerre por Natalie Zemon Davis
- Mi mundo adorado por Sonia Sotomayor
- One L por Scott Turow
- Filosofia del derecho por Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
- The Future of Ideas: The Fate of the Commons in a Connected World por Lawrence Lessig
- Contencioso-administrativo : personal por Rafael Entrena Cuesta
Etiquetas relacionadas
What is the LC Classification?
The Library of Congress Classification (LCC) is the classification system used by most academic libraries in the US and many around the world.
LCC is divided into twenty-one base classes, designated by letters. These are followed by numbers, which work like whole numbers, not the decimal system used by the Melvil Decimal System. Decimals, other letters and other numbers follow. You can discover more at the Library of Congress website.
As a government creation, LCC is without copyright. LibraryThing's implementation draws on the work of Matt Miller, John Mark Ockerbloom, and Seth Woodworth, who transformed the Library of Congress' abbreviated schedules into a machine-readable format.
For more on LibraryThing's implementation of the Library of Congress Classification, see the Better Classification Pages on Talk.