Efficient and
Cost-Effective Legal Research
This
guide is designed for law school students starting their first clerking
position, as well as new law school graduates starting as firm associates. In
academia, students have the luxury of free access to databases to facilitate
their research. In the practicing world, firm economics limit the resources
available to clerks and associates. The techniques and tips offered here
should help you conduct legal research in an efficient and cost-effective
manner.
General
Guidelines
LexisNexis
/ Westlaw
Bar
Associations - Casemaker and Fastcase
General
Guidelines
-
Find out the research budget for your project. In particular, this will
help determine what electronic resources and materials you will use.
-
If you’re not familiar with the area of law in question, find one or
more secondary sources (i.e., legal encyclopedias, periodical articles,
treatises, loose-leaf materials) to get grounded in the language and
basics.
-
Plan, and physically write out, your search strategy, whether for print
or electronic research. Good research planning will help to define your
issue(s) and jurisdiction(s), as well as point to the types of documents
needed. Write out your search strategy as much as needed; don’t be
afraid to use a few sentences. Look at the key words in your sentences;
think of synonyms for those keywords. Use your key words to construct
one or more search statements. Use Boolean connectors and parentheses
to combine keywords, similarly to data combinations in algebra or deductive
logic.
-
Use your firm’s library, as well as other accessible law libraries.
Does your firm belong to the Cleveland
Law Library Association? Are you near a law school library
(eg, Cleveland-Marshall College of Law Library)? Get to know the
librarians, and use their expertise to help facilitate your research.
Bottom line, don’t pay to read something on a fee-based database (i.e.,
LexisNexis, Westlaw) if a convenient library has it.
-
Use the free databases available from consortia libraries. For example,
the University Library and Law Library at Cleveland State University
participate in OhioLINK,
the Ohio library consortia. OhioLINK provides access to over 100 Research
Databases, freely available to anyone that physically walks
into an OhioLINK library. Off-site access is limited to faculty, students,
and staff.
-
Find out what databases (i.e. LexisNexis, Westlaw) your employer provides.
Remember, even if you are still enrolled as a student at Cleveland-Marshall
College of Law, you may not use your student LexisNexis or Westlaw passwords
to do work for your employer. Get training and a password under
your employer's contract. Find out the terms of the database contract.
What files are available? Do you pay by transaction or time? More
on this in the LexisNexis / Westlaw
section of this guide.
-
Use WorldWide Web search services, but be very critical in your review
of search results. For
a discussion of the issues involved evaluating Web sites and effectively
searching the Web, see the Web
Searching
guide on the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law Library Web site.
-
Learn what's available on the Web that you can substitute for commercial
services. Remember that recent cases, statutes, regulations and
administrative decisions are increasingly officially posted on their
producer's Web sites. See the Internet
Legal Research guide on the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law
Library Web site for examples of resources you may want to bookmark
or note as favorites.
-
Keep a research log so you can retrace your steps.
- Know
when to stop researching. Are you starting to find the same items and
analyses? Do you really need every possible case, statute, regulation,
treatise, or periodical article?
-
Be judicious when photocopying. Do you really need hard copy of everything?
Limit yourself to the most relevant items.
-
Update your research at the time you find items, and again when you’re
finalizing your memo or brief.
LexisNexis
/ Westlaw
If
your firm subscribes to Lexis/Nexis or Westlaw, it is important that you
find out the terms of the contract. In addition, no matter how much training
you’ve had, ask your librarian or vendor representative for additional
training. Learn the culture in the firm for use of either service.
Are there alternative database subscriptions they would prefer that you
use for researching specialized areas?
Here
are some cost-effective tips for using LexisNexis or Westlaw:
-
Plan a search before connecting to the system!
- What files or databases
are available? For example, do you only have Ohio resources? Use
the most specific file or database available. Why search all federal
cases when you only need 6th Circuit cases?
- Do
you pay by transaction or time? With transactional pricing, you can
run a previously conducted search from your History or Trail
at no charge. Really proficient searchers may be able to connect, conduct
multiple searches, and disconnect at a lower time cost than transaction
cost.
-
If you have a citation, use Get a Document or Find
instead of searching.
-
Use Segment or Field searching to reduce false hits.
These limit your search to a particular section of a document.
-
Use Focus or Locate to refine or narrow a search at
no charge. Consider entering multiple searches as one search statement,
then separating them via Focus or Locate.
-
Use the Table of Contents or Documents in Sequence
functions to browse materials at no charge.
-
Browse search results in the KWIC view or Term to Term
to determine relevance; if you’re really good, browse in the CITE view.
-
In LexisNexis, if a headnote is on point, use More Like This Headnote.
In Westlaw, if a Key Number is on point, use KeySearch.
-
When using Shepard’s® in LexisNexis, use Custom Restrictions
to get as specific as possible.
-
Use CheckCite® and WestCheck to check your citations.
-
Print with your Web browser for free.
Bar
Associations - Casemaker and Fastcase
Bar
Associations offer a variety of legal research resources within their
membership benefits.
Ohio
State Bar Association membership benefits include access to Casemaker,
which includes a Federal Library of US Supreme Court and Circuit
Court opinions, and other materials, as well as over 20 State Collections,
each composed of case law, court rules, statutes, attorney general opinions,
and selected municipal codes. OSBA
membership is free for law students, as well as for the first
year of new admittees to the Ohio Bar.
Cleveland
Bar Association membership benefits include access to Fastcase,
a federal and 50-state case law database, and Ohio Decisions Weekly,
which provides summaries of all Supreme Court and Appellate court decisions.
CBA membership
is free for law students.
Laura
E. Ray, MA, MLS
Educational
Programming Librarian
April
2007
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