Finding Articles in Law Reviews, Journals, and Other Legal Periodicals
QUICKLINKS to Periodical Indexes and Databases :
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Locating Journals in the Library Collections:
When you have a citation to a particular article, or are trying to locate journals in a particular field, use Journal Finder or SCHOLAR to help you find out what journals, periodicals, magazines, newspapers, or newsletters the Law Library or University Library subscribe to, and the format options available to you.
Locating Free Online Journals:
See our page: Law Reviews and Law Journals on the Web
Subject Searching Using Indexes
Indexes provide access to articles organized by subject, author and perhaps other criteria, and often provide links to the full text of the articles as well as their citations. When you use an index, you are the beneficiary of the work of a subject expert who has read the material and assigned relevant subject headings to describe it. Online indexes offer several fields for searching although the historical depth of the index may not equal its print counterparts. In an online index, you will often have the ability to search both by subject (from a standard list applicable to all items in the database) and keyword (words appearing anywhere in the citation).
Index to Legal Periodicals: (Wilsonweb's ILP/ILP Retrospective, Lexis/Nexis, Westlaw) Index to articles from more than 500 legal journals, yearbooks, institutes, bar association organizations, university publications, law reviews, and government publications. Indexing includes items from from the United States, Puerto Rico, Great Britain, Ireland, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Wilsonweb's ILP Retrospective covers articles from 1918-1981, with links to full text of many of the articles in HeinOnline (below). Other online versions cover articles indexed after July, 1981. The print version of the Index to Legal Periodicals is located in the Law Library's reference collection, and indexes articles from 1908 to 2009. KF 8 .I54. In addition to the subject approach, there is also a Table of Statutes and Table of Cases, for identifying articles about specific laws or cases.
Legal Resource Index: (Westlaw , LexisNexis) Index to articles from more than 850 journals from the United States, Canada, Great Britain, New Zealand, and Australia, including law reviews, bar association journals, and legal newspapers.
Index to Foreign Legal Periodicals: Multilingual index to articles and book reviews published worldwide. Also analyzed are the contents of legal essays, festschrifts, melanges, and congress reports. The print version of the Index to Foreign Legal Periodicals is located in the Law Library reference collection and contains coverage from 1960. K 33 .I38 The online version is accessible from the Law School network.
Subject Searching Full-Text
Full-text searching options include searching the full electronic text of a particular issue or run of issues of a periodical or group of periodicals. If you are looking for a unique phrase or concept, struggling with a partial citation, you wish to examine a subject as covered in a particular group of periodicals, or are hoping to locate material not yet caught by indexers, full-text searching offers opportunities to customize your research.
LexisNexis (Legal > Secondary Legal > Law Reviews and Journals): Search combined files of US Law Reviews and Journals, US and Canadian Law Reviews, Canadian combined, ABA Journals, United Kingdom Law Journals, as well as journals arranged by jurisdiction and area of law and individual journals.
LexisNexis Legal News Search files arranged by practice area, jurisdiction, and other, as well as Mealey’s Legal News Briefs
Law Reviews via LexisNexis Academic (OhioLINK) Available in the Law Library to the public. Available remotely with a CSU ID and SCHOLAR PIN.
Westlaw (Law Reviews, Bar Journals and Legal Periodicals): Search Journals and Law Reviews Combined, Legal Newsletters, Legal Newspapers, Law Practice Database, Texts and Periodicals, as well as journals and law reviews arranged by jurisdiction and specific publishers. Also, appear as searchable under specific Topical Areas of Law
HeinOnline Image based collection of nearly 400 legal periodicals from inception (pre-1980 coverage unique to this service); includes charts, graphs, photographs, and footnotes as they are in the published articles. Can search US Law Journal Library, Most Cited Law Journals, Core US Law Journals, International and non- US Law Journals. Includes issue Tables of Contents. See HeinOnline's YouTube Channel for video tutorials on using the system. Available in the law library to the public. Available remotely with a CSU ID and SCHOLAR PIN.
Legal Collection (via OhioLINK) Centered on the discipline of law and legal topics, Legal Collection is a collection of scholarly peer-reviewed publications including law journals, documents, and case studies. Legal Collection offers full text for nearly 250 law journals. In addition to full text, indexing and abstracts are provided for all journals in the collection. The majority of full text titles are available in native (searchable) PDF, or scanned-in-color. Full text information dates as far back as 1965.
Electronic Journal Center (OhioLINK) See especially subject cluster Social Sciences - Politics, Political Science and Law
JSTOR 1838- Back files only of selected academic journals, no current issues.
EBSCOHOST databases See especially Academic Search Premier, Newspaper Source
Ingenta See Search Tips
Google Scholar
Search for scholarly books and articles available for free online, as well as items obtainable from the library. Search boxes for journal title, author, date, keywords, broad subject areas such as social science. Also a search for legal opinions and journals (both together). Search by title of article by using operators, for example - intitle:constitution .
It searches HeinOnline, Jstor and more databases, for which the links will work on campus. To link to HeinOnline, etc. off campus go to the Electronic Resources page. Google Scholar DOES NOT INDEX EVERYTHING on HeinOnline or other library databases, so you must check the other library databases and indexes too. Only 50% of HeinOnline journal articles are indexed by Google Scholar. See Hein's blog post. Library databases have more sophisticated search mechanisms and may be more accurate.
Revised JRN 11/09;LNAcmr02/10