Legal History

Legal Databases: Comparative Analysis

Legal research was one of the first areas of scholarship to move into the electronic world, with the introduction of dial-up terminals for searching case law in the 1970s. Today, most legal research done in law schools, courts, and the legal profession at large is conducted via computerized databases. Legal professionals depend primarily on services purchased from the two giants in the field, Westlaw and LexisNexis.



See also the CRL resources below related to Law and government:

English legal manuscripts project

The purpose of this project is to make available on microfiche a collection of manuscripts relating to the history of English law. CRL owns Stage I, sections 1-4, which contains materials held at the Harvard Law School:

  • Section I : Year Books
  • Section II : Reports of Cases 1500-1700
  • Sections III-IV : Reports of Cases after 1700

Great Britain. Foreign Office. Law Officers' opinions to the Foreign Office, 1793-1860 : a reproduction of the manuscript series with index and commentaries.

Facsimile reproduction of the manuscript reports on legal questions under consideration by the Foreign Office. Before 1860, the Foreign Office did not have its own legal advisors, and these reports were written by legal scholars. The volumes contain about 9,500 opinions from F.O. 83 .