Notes from the Technology Trenches - Top Web Sites for Summer Associates
By Cindy Carlson, Published on August 1, 2002
Cindy Carlson is the Electronic Resources Librarian at Fried Frank Harris Shriver & Jacobson in Washington, D.C., a web committee member for the Law Librarian’s Society of Washington, D.C., and organizer of its Legal Research Training Focus Group.
Updated June 30, 2003
It's too darned hot in the nation's capital, and this month, we revisit
our summer associate theme with some more information on using the Web -
that useful tool and potentially huge time waster. We've already covered
some of the basic time-and
frustration-saving techniques for Web searching, but this issue I'd like
to talk about some of the best general-interest and legal Web sites that can
help answer the kinds of questions we most frequently hear from our
summers. If you have other sites that seem like useful additions,
please let me know. The services
I've chosen to highlight are all free to search, though some offer advanced
features at an extra cost or may require registration.
Law Schools
Any number of law school sites are great
starting points. Among the best known is
Cornell's Legal Information Institute
(LII) with its great collection of both online and print resource
recommendations on a full range of topics. There are also some school sites
dedicated to summer associates like the
Georgetown
Law Library Summer Associate Survival Site. These sites can be
especially useful if your internship is far from your own law school. Check
out the local offerings and see what is available. Georgetown, for instance,
offers overviews of DC, Maryland and Virginia legal research as well as some
great federal research guides.
Collected Links
Another site I recommend as a general legal
research starting point doesn't fit very neatly into typical topical or
format categories. Lawyer Express,
an offshoot of another terrific site,
CEO Express, is rich with links to almost every useful legal site you
can imagine. The idea behind the site is the 80/20 rule: 80% of what you
need is available through just 20% of the sites out there. Sure, you can
find the US Code many places, but which is the best? Lawyer Express sorts
out the sites that are not current, those thin on resources, or those which
mainly duplicate materials which originally appeared elsewhere and leaves
you with a dense collection of the most essential links with very little
explanatory text.
I have seen this site reviewed as visually busy and difficult to use, but
from my perspective, it's a great site for summer associates. Admittedly, it
can be overwhelming on an initial visit. I encourage our users to print the
page out and read through it, and they generally become enthusiastic
converts. Happily, even without the text, most links are self explanatory.
Resources include legal news, search tools, courts, Martindale, forms and
associations as well as an amazing set of general business reference sites.
The editors also recognize that a busy person needs a break and include fun
resources on restaurants, shopping and entertainment. Let there be life
after work!
Sites Organized By Topic
Sometimes legal questions lead to non-legal
research. For a general idea of what's available on the Web on a non-legal
topic, try a subject-organized site.
Yahoo! is still the best site to search
if you're not sure what you might find or if the topic you are interested in
is very broad or frequently mentioned on the web. Yahoo arranges Internet
resources by topic. If you click on News & Media, you'll see a list of
narrower topics like TV and Weather, and if you click on any of those you'll
see a list of even more narrow choices, and so on, until you get to exactly
what you need: a web page on your topic. A word search on Yahoo looks for
potential matches from within its lists of topics and in an index of
selected pages which is a subset of the
Google database; it does not search the text of any web page for your
keywords unless you use
the advanced search option and specify that it should do so. You can
also use Yahoo for legal
research, but since it's a general interest site, you may save yourself
some time by using a site with a legal focus.
FindLaw, brought to you by Westlaw, is
a subject-categorized site that will probably get you to most law-related
materials you don't see immediately on
Lawyer Express. There is overlap
between the two, but on FindLaw the resources are annotated, organized in
easy to use categories and more inclusive. The format is similar to
Yahoo's, but the focus is legal instead
of general. A useful aspect to note: when searching for state agency
materials it can often be difficult to predict how a given state will name
the relevant department. FindLaw provides brief but very helpful
descriptions that make it easier to locate the correct entity, and tends to
use the same overall hierarchical structure to organize them, making it
easier to find what you need.
Search Engines
Using a search engine is a popular strategy
for finding general information on the Web, but I don't necessarily
recommend it as a first option. If you have a broad idea of what you need
and are looking for starting resources, a law school site, link collection
or subject-organized site is usually a better bet. However, search engines
are great tools when you need something very specific.
Is there anyone who doesn't know about
Google yet? While no one should use only a single search tool all the
time, Google is definitely my first choice these days. A close runner up for
general Web searching is AllTheWeb,
also known as FAST. Both Google and AllTheWeb index .pdf documents, and they
are currently competing to maintain the biggest index of documents available
via the Web. Each has its strengths:
AllTheWeb, if you haven't used it,
has some slightly more flexible date searching features than Google on
its advanced page
and a more Euro-centric focus. Google
indexes a broader
variety of documents, has that fabulous
cache feature
and some unique search syntaxes (see
http://www.google.com/help/refinesearch.html and
http://www.google.com/help/operators.html). Though most of our summers
were already Google users, few were familiar with the
Google Toolbar. The abilities
to search within a specific site, highlight search terms, and "find"
successive occurrences of terms on a page using the easy to install toolbar
was a happy revelation. Both are definitely worth using for general Web
searches for highly specific or unique terms or phrases.
Here too there is a legal focus alternative.
LawCrawler, associated with
FindLaw, searches the text of a set of
law-related pages using Google rather than searching only through FindLaw's
paths of connected topics (the default FindLaw search). If you find that a
Google search nets you a little more non-legal information than you'd like,
this is a potential alternative.
Legal Directories
Martindale-Hubbell Lawyer Locator is free, available at your desktop,
and VERY EASY to use! This site takes the directory information of its paper
counterpart and provides users with the tools to search by attorney, firm
name, city, practice area and more, as well as providing links and/or
listings to firm web sites if they exist. Aside from its obvious uses as a
directory for contact information for firms and attorneys, it's a great tool
when you want to bone up on a partner's background before she takes you to
lunch.
West's Legal Directory (WLD) at FindLaw
is similar to the M-H site. This directory also includes information on
judges, government and corporate lawyers as well as attorneys at firms, but
some firms even list other legal staff here like legal assistants. A listing
in the West directory costs less than one in Martindale, so it's a good
place to check for single attorney or small firm listings as well. Beware,
though, it tends not to be as complete or as current because firms still
tend to view a Martindale listing as the one with more status. So, try
Martindale and if you're not finding what you need, this is a good second
stop.
Business Information
Many law school students are surprised to find during their summer internships just how much general business research is involved in the every day work of a law firm. Business background information on new clients, or on the opposition's client, is vital. Some great places to start:
Hoover's
Online comes from the publisher of a popular series of print company
directories that has developed a great Web resource for the same kind of
information. The free company profiles typically contain a short
conversational description of the company and its history, address and
telephone information, a link to the company's Web site if one is available,
a list of key officers with links to their biographies and compensation
information where available, plus major competitors and more.
Free EDGAR is a resource for the
public company information filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC). This used to be one of the best free resources available, and, though
it now requires registration, I think it's still a worthy alternative to the
SEC's own site. Its main advantage is that documents are organized into a
convenient (though not always very informative) Table of Contents format.
This makes it easier to select a specific section of a filing to view or
print rather than being stuck navigating through an entire lengthy document.
Financial information is great and should be current up to the latest fiscal
quarter. You can search by company name or ticker, form type, SIC number, or
simply look at all of today's filings. These filings are some of the best
resources for business information available.
Edgar Online People is
another free search, this time for business people. Many executives serve on
the boards of more than one public company, and if you want to know about
the movers in shakers who are your clients, or your opposition, this is a
another way to find out about their business connections.
Litigation Resources
Since most research in law school is case-oriented, students expect to be spending time working with cases during their summer internships, but some of the less conceptual and more practical aspects of litigation work are made easier with the help of the following two sites:
Court Rules Online is an excellent resource for litigation specialists.
This site provides links to all the rules of courts which are available
anywhere on the Web from federal down to local county courts. It is updated
very frequently and is well worth a visit.
Basic
Legal Citation: Can't find your Blue Book and need a little help with
figuring out how to cite a publication for a brief? The Legal Information
Institute (LII) comes to the rescue with an online guide. The Folio-based
service with its expanding and collapsing Table of Contents format isn't the
easiest thing to use, but it may do in a pinch.
Government Information
Two other areas in which students don't get much practice during school are legislative and administrative research. Some sources that may help:
Thomas,
named after Thomas Jefferson, comes from the Library of Congress and is THE
site for current legislative information at the federal government level. It
provides links to legislation from as far back as 1995 including detailed
information on status throughout the legislative process. It also includes
links to the web sites of members of the House and Senate where available
and information on committees and their schedules.
Updating the US Code is no
easy task whether you are working with the official version in print, or one
of its annotated equivalents. Even online, the Code is often not completely
current. These tables show
where recently enacted legislation will appear in the Code and which
sections have been changed by them. Users can sort the tables by Public Law
number or by Code section. One note: the tables only include those
provisions of law that have been classified to the Code, which takes some
time, so they aren't ultra-current either, but they are definitely worth
checking. To date the tables cover legislation enacted
from 2001 through 2003, the 108th Congress, 1st Session, Public Laws 108-1
to 108-30.
GPO Access is the official
government site for the publication of the Code of Federal Regulations and
Federal Register, among many other federal government documents, straight
from the Government Printing Office. Use the "Quick Links" to get to the
most popular documents. While there are some real advantages to using this
site (it's free, documents are formatted to look like the originals, it's
searchable), the disadvantages can be frustrating. Often, the nice graphic
format is not available, for instance, and the searching is rudimentary at
best. The text formats usually are available though, and it can be a good
spot to visit if you simply need to retrieve a specific citation. Take
careful note of document currency, however; most materials are only as
current as their print counterparts.
Grammar
Those legal writing classes teach you some specifics for the documents you're likely to write over the summer, but nothing is more embarrassing than being caught out in a simple grammatical error. To avoid those potential black marks on your summer evaluations, definitely visit The Elements of Style and Tomato Nation. Both offer slightly offbeat but highly memorable lessons on grammar basics.
That's a Wrap
While the above list is far from exhaustive, it should give most summer associates a nice set of starting points. Summers, if you are working in a specialty practice area like Intellectual Property, Tax, Government Contracts or one of the many others, know that there is a whole world of resources online to make your life easier, and not all of them are simple Web sites. Your firm may subscribe to some fee-based Web libraries and your librarians or the attorneys you're working with can probably also recommend e-mail discussion groups, news services with e-mail delivery and more to help you work more efficiently. Even though you may be feeling some pressure to avoid asking for help, don't forget that intelligent questions can go a long way toward making you look good, and enjoy your summer while it lasts.
