1.
Quimbee - a case brief
database.
2. PreCYdent - an "open law source" and
legal opinion
search.
3. SSRN - an ideal
source for cutting-edge legal scholarship (and a repository of
older articles too).
4. AltLaw - free
access to federal case
law, but not as up-to-date as other sources.
5. FindLaw - free
access to case law, provided by Westlaw's owner.
6. LexisONE - Lexis' answer to
West's FindLaw: the last ten
years of state and federal court opinions, and U.S. Supreme Court
opinions from 1781 to present, all free.
7. VersusLaw - inexpensive
subscription alternative to LexisNexis and Westlaw (federal and
state appellate case law).
8. Fastcase - subscription-based
online case law research service, providing access to law, court
cases, statutes, and regulations, at reason.
9. CALI - The Center for
Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction provides free online training
in most law school subjects.
10. Your
local law library - paper and electronic resources, plus
librarians who can help:
For help with conducting legal research, ask
a law librarian or consult the Gallagher Law Library's legal research guide. If
you are not a lawyer but still need to do legal research, you might
also find it useful to read How to Research a Legal
Problem: A Guide for
Non-Lawyers.