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Secondary Sources
Secondary sources criticize, describe, discuss, and summarize the law found in primary law sources. (Primary law includes constitutions, laws, judicial opinions, and regulations.)
Generally edited by law students and published by law schools.
Include articles by law professors, judges, and other authors.
Include articles (called "notes" or "comments") written by students.
General (e.g., Washington Law Review) or specialized (e.g., Washington International Law Journal).
May be published by a professional association (e.g., Business Lawyer, published by the ABA) or a private publisher (e.g., Journal of Empirical Legal Studies).
Articles are often 25-75 pages long and heavily footnoted.
Articles are focused on particular issue, but generally provide background.
Articles usually take a position (e.g., suggesting a law reform or criticizing a decision).
Bar journals
Published by national, state, or local bar associations.
Articles by journalists or lawyers.
Articles are often short (1-3 pages) and illustrated.
Legal newspapers
Daily, weekly, or monthly.
National (e.g., National Law Journal) or local (e.g., New York Law Journal).
News on litigation, legislation, law practice, etc.
Standard news sources
Newspapers
Magazines
Broadcast
Often cover litigation, legislation, etc.
Legal newsletters
Daily, weekly, or monthly.
Focused on practice areas (e.g., tax, environmental law, asbestos litigation).
Available on Bloomberg Law (Bloomberg BNA newsletters), LexisNexis (selected publishers), Westlaw (selected publishers.
Journals from other fields
Legal scholars aren't the only ones who study legal topics. If your research project touches on history, political science, economics, business, public health, or any other subject, consider looking at works from those fields.