Lexis and Westlaw are the biggest names in subscription legal database provision. The author provides a comparative critical examination from his experience is of academic subscriptions to the services - including their American academic contentPreprint of an article by Paul Norman, former Reference and Online Services Librarian at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, published in Legal Information Management, the journal of the British and Irish Association of Law Librarian
In this study, a group of recent law articles was examined to determine the proportion of cited reso...
This article begins the investigation into the different ways results are generated in West\u27s Cu...
This Brown Bag covered the legal community’s response to WestlawNext and the future of the Westlaw w...
WestlawNext and Lexis Advance — the new generation of legal research systems from Thomson Reuters an...
Just twenty-five years ago computer-assisted legal research was little more than a dream when Profes...
There are synchronistic moments when in the process of writing. While contemplating this article, an...
In this article, the author discusses improvements to the Lexis Advance research platform
This article discusses some of the lesser known complexities of LEXIS and WESTLAW and the necessity ...
It can be difficult to convince law students to try new resources outside of Westlaw and Lexis, espe...
Mead Corp is selling Mead Data Central, the owner of the full-text legal resource database LEXIS. Th...
This paper considers issues of open access from the context of the broader legal information industr...
The Eighth Circuit recently held that Mead Data Central infringed West Publishing\u27s copyright by ...
Humans and machines are both involved in the creation of legal research resources. For legal informa...
The Annual Academic Law Library Survey provides a snapshot of the staffing, expenditure on acquisiti...
Free legal research can be conducted on these three websites. While these sites do not research as f...
In this study, a group of recent law articles was examined to determine the proportion of cited reso...
This article begins the investigation into the different ways results are generated in West\u27s Cu...
This Brown Bag covered the legal community’s response to WestlawNext and the future of the Westlaw w...
WestlawNext and Lexis Advance — the new generation of legal research systems from Thomson Reuters an...
Just twenty-five years ago computer-assisted legal research was little more than a dream when Profes...
There are synchronistic moments when in the process of writing. While contemplating this article, an...
In this article, the author discusses improvements to the Lexis Advance research platform
This article discusses some of the lesser known complexities of LEXIS and WESTLAW and the necessity ...
It can be difficult to convince law students to try new resources outside of Westlaw and Lexis, espe...
Mead Corp is selling Mead Data Central, the owner of the full-text legal resource database LEXIS. Th...
This paper considers issues of open access from the context of the broader legal information industr...
The Eighth Circuit recently held that Mead Data Central infringed West Publishing\u27s copyright by ...
Humans and machines are both involved in the creation of legal research resources. For legal informa...
The Annual Academic Law Library Survey provides a snapshot of the staffing, expenditure on acquisiti...
Free legal research can be conducted on these three websites. While these sites do not research as f...
In this study, a group of recent law articles was examined to determine the proportion of cited reso...
This article begins the investigation into the different ways results are generated in West\u27s Cu...
This Brown Bag covered the legal community’s response to WestlawNext and the future of the Westlaw w...