Research Guides: Legal PeriodicalsLegal periodicals contain articles on specific legal topics. Academic law reviews and journals, such as the Missouri Law Review, publish articles written by professors, practitioners, judges, and law students. The articles often provide detailed analysis of narrowly focused legal topics with extensive footnotes to primary authority (cases, statutes, regulations, etc.) and to influential secondary sources. Law review articles are useful for obtaining background information about an unfamiliar topic, identifying primary authority, and crafting policy arguments on issues of first impression or legal reform. Law review articles (and treatises) usually carry more weight with courts than other types of secondary authority such as legal encyclopedias and practice materials. Articles in bar association journals and legal newspapers are shorter than law review articles and often less theoretical. They typically explain how to accomplish a specific lawyering task or summarize new developments in a practice area. Legal newspapers such as the National Law Journal and Missouri Lawyers' Weekly report on court decisions and other newsworthy legal events.Legal Periodical Indexes
Legal Periodical Full-Text Collections
Legal Periodical FAQWhere can I find an article published after 1980, when I have the full citation, e.g., Clark Byse, "Introductory Comments to the First-Year Class in Contracts," 78 Boston U. L. Rev. 59 (1998)?
Check Hein Online. For off-site access, MU currently enrolled students may search Hein Online at: http://mulibraries.missouri.edu/refservices/db/main.asp. How do I find articles on a specific subject? Legal Trac is the best option for first year law students. When researching in the law library, use: http://law.missouri.edu/library/resources. Currently enrolled MU students may access Legal Trac offsite from: http://mulibraries.missouri.edu/refservices/db/main.asp. The citations I pulled up on Legal Trac include cites to law reviews, bar journals and legal newspapers. Which are most important? For most law school research projects, law reviews are best. They will also be the most readily available sources. If you need a state bar journal article or legal newspaper article, check with a reference librarian for availability. |
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