June 13, 2005

Current Law Journal Content Coverage

Current Law Journal Content is now covering 1,000 law journals.
Approximately 650 are supplied through the generosity of the University
of Texas Tarlton Law Library from scans of paper copies received by
them, 70 are scanned from paper copies received at W&L, and 280 are
gathered from electronic sources such as RSS feeds, e-mail alerts and
web sites. See http://law.wlu.edu/library/CLJC

More law journals would be added if a reliable source of content page
data could be found. I've appended a list of just a few examples - if
anyone subscribes to one of these and would be willing to regularly send
along a copy of the journal's contents page, please let me know.
John Doyle (doylej@wlu.edu)
------------------------------------------------------
Australian Journal of Law & Society
Australian Tax Review
Bio-Science Law Review
British Tax Review
Cardozo Journal of Conflict Resolution
Children's Legal Rights Journal
Computer Law Review and Technology Journal
Edinburgh Law Review
Environs, the Journal of Environmental Law & Policy at UC Davis School
of Law
European Competition Law Review
European Intellectual Property Review
European Review of Contract Law
First Amendment Law Review
Hibernian Law Journal
Indian Journal of International Law
International Journal of Franchising Law
International Sports Law Review
Irish Criminal Law Journal
Irish Employment Law Journal
Irish Journal of Family Law
New Zealand Journal of Environmental Law
UC Davis Journal of Juvenile Law and Policy
University of Ottawa Law & Technology Journal
University of Western Sydney Law Review
Waikato Law Review
Wisconsin Environmental Law Journal

Posted by doyle at 8:32 AM

June 6, 2005

New Journals

The following three new journals have been added:

Hastings Business Law Journal (2005- ) (University of California Hastings College of Law); I/S: A Journal of Law and Policy for the Information Society (2005- ) (a joint publication of the Moritz College of Law at Ohio State University and The Carnegie Mellon University's H. J. Heinz III School of Law and Public Policy); International Law & Management Review (2005- ) (J. Reuben Clark Law School at Brigham Young University).

Posted by doyle at 9:30 AM