About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

1 Bimonthly Rev. L. Books 1 (1990)

handle is hein.journals/bimrvlab1 and id is 1 raw text is: 






BIMONTHLY REVIEW OF LAW BOOKS

                                                 Volume 1 Number 1 January-February 1990






 HOW TO FIND BOOK REVIEWS AT THE DAWN OF THE '90s
 by John   Nann


           As the 1990s approach  and computers and
       compact disc players proliferate in law libraries, it
       has become easier to search for periodical articles
       using the different forms in which the legal periodical
       indexes now appear. Legal periodical indexes are
       now  available on compact disc, computer, and in
       the traditional paper format.
       Compact   Disc
           The Index to Legal Periodicals (ILP) is available
       on a Wilsondisc compact disc from H.W. Wilson.
       The compact disc (CD-ROM) player is hooked up to
       a personal computer, and the information entered
       on the disc can be accessed with CD-ROM software.
       The Index to Legal Periodicals covers approximately
       500 periodicals. The compact disc, produced quar-
       terly, covers the time period from August 1981 to
       the present. Like the ILP in paper, ILP on Wilsondisc
       allows searches for book reviews using the book
       author's name. However,  Wilsondisc also allows
       searches by book title, reviewer's name, and subject.
           The Legal Resources Index (LRI) is available on
       compact disc from Information Access Co. This is
       the most extensive of the American legal periodical
       indexes. It indexes approximately 900 periodicals
       including law reviews, bar journals, and legal
       newspapers. Book  reviews may be searched using
       the book's author, the name of the reviewer, or
       subject. The  term book  review is used as a
       second-level subject term, which makes perusing
       for book reviews among  the list of subjects very
       easy.
       Computers
           LEXIS, from Mead Data Central, provides access
       to legal periodicals. LEXIS includes some 50 perio-


See  Michael Rustad's  Editor's Preface to Bimonthly
Review  of Law Books  on page 3.


dicals in a full-text format which allows searching
not only of the authors, reviewers, and titles, but
also of the complete text of the review. Coverage in
the full-text files goes back to the early 1980s.
LEXIS also includes the Index to Legal Periodicals and
LegalResources Index. In these files, the entire ILP or
LRI citation, including subject terms, may be searched.
    WESTLAW,   from West Publishing Company,
also provides a variety of means for searching for
legal periodicals. The Texts and Periodicals file
includes approximately 280 items. Of these 280
items, approximately 50 include the complete issue
and the rest selected items. The full text of these
items may be searched. Coverage in the Text and
Periodicals file varies by title; however, nothing is
included before 1981.
    WESTLAW also includes   periodical indexes
which provide citations to legal periodicals. It contains
the Legal Resources Index, which indexes at least 850
Anglo-American legal periodicals as well as selected
articles of legal interest from general-interest
periodicals. Coverage dates from 1980. Searches
may be conducted using the citation, author, title,
date, index terms, type of article, and summary
(including: case name and citation, statute name
and citation, jurisdiction, named person, reviewed
author, and publisher).
    WESTLAW also   includes the Index to Legal
Periodicals discussed above, as well as the eight
most recent issues of the Current Index to Legal
Periodicals. CILP, published weekly, indexes some
300 legal publications. Searches may be conducted
using citation, date, topic, text of index entry, and
name  of publication. The value of this publication
is that it has more recent material than the more
inclusive services. Obviously it has limited range. It
should be noted that some WESTLAW contracts do
not include ILP and CILP.

                        (Continued on next page)


Bimonthly Review of Law Books / January-February 1990

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Short-term subscription options include 24 hours, 48 hours, or 1 week to HeinOnline.

Contact us for annual subscription options:

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most