Ideally, legal encyclopedias include the following:
- A complete and integrated statement of all applicable law
- Citations to relied-upon authority (i.e. cases, treatises and
restatements)
- Analytical and subject indexes
- Frequent supplements
An encyclopedia is used as a starting point in a search for law. The
researcher will find an elementary statement of the applicable law and a list
of cases supporting the statement.
In the Wirtz Labor Library we have the following encyclopedias:
- Corpus Juris Secondum (CJS) 2d (West Publishing)
- American Jurisprudence (Am Jur) 2d.(Lexis Publishing)
There are differences between the two titles:
Corpus Juris Secondum |
American Jurispurudence |
Cites all cases on point |
Cites selective cases |
Indexes correspond to Digests and West's Key Numbers system |
Indexes correspond to American Law Reports |
References to West Publications |
References to LEXIS Products |
No almanac function |
Desk Book with Historical and Legal Facts |
Portions of CJS are available via WESTLAW. Call 1
800 REF ATTY for assistance. Am Jur 2d is available on
LEXIS in CONLAW;AMJUR
There are currently no Legal Encyclopedias available for free on the Internet.
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