In this study, a group of recent law articles was examined to determine the proportion of cited resources that are easily findeable online. Searches were conducted in databases such as LEXIS and Westlaw, and on the Internet, for full-text versions of every source cited in seven articles. The results have been broken down into 13 categories, including: federal cases, books, foreign law, and legal periodicals pre-1990. Not surprisingly coverage differs widely between the categories. Overall the study found that 77% of the 1,984 citations in the articles reviewed are available online. This article concludes with a general discussion of why the percentage is likely to increase in the future
Aim of the study: This study aimed to collect the figure of documents published in ten journals on t...
Prevailing citation practice in law journals is to use uniform resource locators (URLs) when citing ...
Five hundred citations to Internet resources from articles published in library and information scie...
As more legal research is conducted online, it is reasonable to conclude that there will be a corres...
This Essay updates two well-known earlier studies (dated 1985 and 1996) by the first coauthor settin...
Can you really read a law review or journal article on the Web? The answer is, it depends. There...
Part I of this article examines the proportion of reported opinions from U.S. federal and state cour...
Just twenty-five years ago computer-assisted legal research was little more than a dream when Profes...
The researchers report on a study to examine the persistence of Web-based content. In 2002, a sample...
A review of online guides to legal citation including the Legal Information Institute's Basic Legal ...
In the not so distant past, before the Internet, doing legal research necessitated access to either ...
In this third installment examining citation studies, Ms. Whisner looks at five articles from each o...
This Issue: Reference Source of the Month: Hein Online by Gail F. Zwirner [Library Hours]https://sch...
While law review articles are preserved in fee-based databases such as Westlaw and Lexis and thus ar...
The article asserts that scholarly ideas matter more than form and that online supplement scholarshi...
Aim of the study: This study aimed to collect the figure of documents published in ten journals on t...
Prevailing citation practice in law journals is to use uniform resource locators (URLs) when citing ...
Five hundred citations to Internet resources from articles published in library and information scie...
As more legal research is conducted online, it is reasonable to conclude that there will be a corres...
This Essay updates two well-known earlier studies (dated 1985 and 1996) by the first coauthor settin...
Can you really read a law review or journal article on the Web? The answer is, it depends. There...
Part I of this article examines the proportion of reported opinions from U.S. federal and state cour...
Just twenty-five years ago computer-assisted legal research was little more than a dream when Profes...
The researchers report on a study to examine the persistence of Web-based content. In 2002, a sample...
A review of online guides to legal citation including the Legal Information Institute's Basic Legal ...
In the not so distant past, before the Internet, doing legal research necessitated access to either ...
In this third installment examining citation studies, Ms. Whisner looks at five articles from each o...
This Issue: Reference Source of the Month: Hein Online by Gail F. Zwirner [Library Hours]https://sch...
While law review articles are preserved in fee-based databases such as Westlaw and Lexis and thus ar...
The article asserts that scholarly ideas matter more than form and that online supplement scholarshi...
Aim of the study: This study aimed to collect the figure of documents published in ten journals on t...
Prevailing citation practice in law journals is to use uniform resource locators (URLs) when citing ...
Five hundred citations to Internet resources from articles published in library and information scie...