What have we left out of the list below?   
Please contact the authors.



http://overlawyered.com      One of the richest sites about civil litigation and litigiousness, "Overlawyered" reveals latent and patent costs of the existing legal system in the United States, including intangible costs to personal responsibility.  You will find various alerts and tort tales here.

http://www.pointoflaw.com/     The Manhattan Institute, which maintains the Center for Legal Policy, provides this web magazine that collects information and interpretations about civil suits, civil justice, and related topics.  You will find an organized, efficient inventory of specific issues and categories of cases.

http://centerjd.org/     The Center for Justice and Democracy is an organization that strives to increase awareness of the performance of civil courts and issues surrounding civil litigation.  Usually, this site will feature information that militates against tort reforms.

http://www.stellaawards.com/     "The TRUE Stella Awards" is a project of "This is True" http://www.thisistrue.com/.  Randy Cassingham maintains this site, which permits free subscriptions.  The site features litigation stories that have been verified.

http://www.tala.com/     One of many sites that you will find if you google "Citizens Against Lawsuit Abuse," this site is for "Texans Against Lawsuit Abuse."  If you compare various CALAs across the country, you can see how much such groups share and you can see how tort reform messages may be tailored to local polities and cultures.

http://www.lawpsided.com/     "Lawpsided: Legal News with an Attitude" is Sean Carter’s clearinghouse for commentary, stories, speeches, books, and seminars.  Mr. Carter makes himself available as a guest speaker for lawyerly, professional, or social meetings.  Mr. Carter’s site permits users to sign up for free email updates.

http://www.snopes.com/legal/legal.htm     The "Urban Legends Reference Pages" debunk anecdotes and apocrypha, and the legal section of the sites exposes many tort tales as distorted, misleading, or false.

http://atla.org/ConsumerMediaResources/Tier3/FactsheetsResources.aspx   This page at the web site of the Association of Trial Lawyers of America [ATLA -- see Chapter Four in the book] provides multiple links through which to debunk tort tales: "Debunking Urban Legends About the Civil Justice System" and "The Real Frivolous Lawsuits in America:  Businesses Suing Businesses" are examples.

http://www.alec.org/viewpage.cfm?pgname=5.03     The American Legislatative Exchange Council maintains this "Civil Justice" page to provide users with news and views.  Their talking points should prove a useful starting point for learning and conversation.

 http://legalreformnow.com/    Affiliated with the United States Chamber of Commerce, the U.S. Chamber Institute for Legal Reform provides surveys and studies as well as news and views.  Many of the materials to be found at this site are sophisticated and rich.

http://www.lawcomix.com/   This repository will provide you insights into legal culture and caricatures thereof.  

http://www.corpreform.com/  Justinian Lane -- now there's a first name tailored to the law! -- maintains a site that, he says, aims "...  to tell the public the truth about tort reform - that it punishes people to protect profits. That's it. There's no hidden motive. There's no effort to sign up personal injury cases, or garner support for a particular political candidate."  This site raises points against some reforms of civil justice.