Find the best Law Library databases for your research. Unless otherwise noted, databases are available University-Wide. More databases are available on the University Libraries web page: https://libguides.library.arizona.edu/az.php
Questions?
Please contact circulation@law-arizona.libanswers.com.
The following databases are newly acquired or being evaluated for a future subscription.
This collection features publications by and about the Administrative Conference of the United States, an independent federal agency within the executive branch that recommends ways to improve the efficiency, adequacy, and fairness of rulemaking, adjudication, and other administrative processes.
This is your place to discover tools! Our toolkit includes satellite and mapping services, tools for verifying photos and videos, websites to archive web pages, and much more. Most of the tools that we include can be used for free.
What will you find on CanLII
Legal Decisions
The CanLII.org website provides access to court judgments from all Canadian courts, including the Supreme Court of Canada, federal courts, and the courts in all Canada’s provinces and territories. CanLII.org also contains decisions from many federal and provincial administrative tribunals.
When CanLII was established in 2001, it started by publishing current cases, which courts and tribunals sent us as they were written. For most Canadian courts and tribunals, our collection is generally complete for cases decided after 2001.
We have also completed several projects to add historical cases, that is pre-2001 cases, with the goal of offering a comprehensive resource for jurisprudence for access to Canadian law. See this page to learn about recent additions of historical cases.
For a list of our databases with details of their scope, please see this page.
Legislation
CanLII provides access to consolidated statutes and regulations as well as annual statutes for all jurisdictions in Canada. Each jurisdiction has a dedicated page detailing the specific coverage available for it.
Commentary
CanLII provides access to various types of secondary law materials, from law books, journals, articles, reports, and other resources. These materials are available electronically in CanLII.org’s Commentary section. Click here to browse this material.
Finally, our companion website, CanLII Connects, hosts a database of case commentary and case summaries by the legal community. This commentary is linked to and based on the caselaw on CanLII.org.
This website is a portal to the records collected under the Civil Rights Cold Case Records Collection Act of 2018. These records are only a portion of the total case files held by the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). The National Archives, the Civil Rights Cold Case Records Review Board, the Department of Justice, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and other federal agencies continue to work to identify cases and implement the Act.
The review and release of this material is a collaborative process involving multiple stages, including notifying the victim's next of kin, before posting material to the National Archives Catalog and to this site.
NARA and other agencies collect, digitize, and review records in response to requests from the Board. If you are interested in a specific incident that does not appear here, please contact the Board at info@coldcaserecords.gov.
Work on this project is ongoing, and additional records will become accessible through this site as digitization, review, and notification are complete.
Explore over 5,000 meticulously annotated historical and contemporary articles on law librarianship, crafted by expert editors over three decades.
This is a 16TB collection includes over 311,000 datasets harvested during 2024 and 2025, a complete archive of federal public datasets linked by data.gov. It will be updated daily as new datasets are added to data.gov.
This is the first release in our new data vault project to preserve and authenticate vital public datasets for academic research, policymaking, and public use.
We’ve built this project on our long-standing commitment to preserving government records and making public information available to everyone. Libraries play an essential role in safeguarding the integrity of digital information. By preserving detailed metadata and establishing digital signatures for authenticity and provenance, we make it easier for researchers and the public to cite and access the information they need over time.
In addition to the data collection, we are releasing open source software and documentation for replicating our work and creating similar repositories. With these tools, we aim not only to preserve knowledge ourselves but also to empower others to save and access the data that matters to them.
Search the full text of books.
Find the perfect book for your purposes and discover new ones that interest you.
Book Search works just like web search. Try a search on Google Books or on Google.com. When we find a book with content that contains a match for your search terms, we'll link to it in your search results.
If the book is out of copyright, or the publisher has given us permission, you'll be able to see a preview of the book, and in some cases the entire text. If it's in the public domain, you're free to download a PDF copy.
If you find a book you like, click on the "Buy this book" and "Borrow this book" links to see where you can buy or borrow the print book. You can now also buy the ebook from the Google Play Store.
GovInfo is more than a website.
In addition to providing an advanced, metadata-powered search experience, GovInfo also includes a content management system and a standards-compliant preservation repository.
These three components comprise GPO’s world-class system for the comprehensive management of electronic information:
This guide lists acronyms and abbreviations commonly used by the United States federal government. Each acronym is defined and links to the home page (or best alternative) of the identified entity.
While the U.S. Government Manual provided the initial foundation of GovSpeak, this expanded list includes thousands of acronyms not included in that publication; most have been discovered by manual reviews of department websites.
Journal Abbreviation Sources is a registry of Web resources that list or provide access to the full title of journal abbreviations or other types of abbreviated publication titles (e.g., conference proceedings titles).
Selected OPACs that offer abbreviated title searching have also been included. In addition, All That JAS includes select lists and directories that provide access to the unabbreviated titles of serial publications.
All That JAS originally compiled by Gerry McKiernan, Science and Technology Librarian and Bibliographer, Science and Technology Department, Iowa State University Library, Ames, IA 50011.
Lexsitus is an open access online platform for learning and working with legal sources in international criminal law. Users can create reading lists and take notes while working on legal documents. It is developed by the Center for International Law Research and Policy (CILRAP) in partnership with the International Nuremberg Principles Academy, HELM Studio, and Mithya Labs in 2018. Lexsitus offers access to a variety of resources, including lectures, case law, commentary, and digests. The platform is structured around the International Criminal Court's (ICC) Rome Statute, Rules of Procedure and Evidence, and Elements of Crimes. Lexsitus's design is based on the ICC's legal practice, making it useful for both beginners and advanced users.
The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) acquires, preserves, and makes available for research the records of enduring value that were created or received by organizations of the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of the Federal Government. Records in the custody of the National Archives date from pre-federal times to the present. Most of the records are textual, but they can come in a wide variety of media, such as microfilm, maps and charts, architectural and engineering plans, aerial photographs, motion picture reels, video recordings, sound recordings, computer data sets, or still pictures.
Library of historical assets of the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI).
The Unified Voice of Indian Country
Since 1944 NCAI has served as the unified voice for American Indian and Alaska Native Issues.
Founded in 1944, the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) is the oldest, largest, and most representative American Indian and Alaska Native organization serving the broad interests of tribal governments and communities.
NCAI, a non-profit organization, advocates for a bright future for generations to come by taking the lead to gain consensus on a constructive and promising vision for Indian Country. The organization’s policy issues and initiatives are driven by the consensus of our diverse membership, which consists of American Indian and Alaska Native tribal governments, tribal citizens, individuals, and Native and non-Native organizations.
For nearly seven decades since its founding, NCAI has remained true to the original purpose of the organization: to be the unified voice of tribal nations. As outlined in the NCAI Constitution, our purpose is to serve as a forum for unified policy development among tribal governments in order to: (1) protect and advance tribal governance and treaty rights; (2) promote the economic development and health and welfare in Indian and Alaska Native communities; and (3) educate the public toward a better understanding of Indian and Alaska Native tribes.
Search Tribal Nations by Keyword
The Unified Voice of Indian Country
Since 1944 NCAI has served as the unified voice for American Indian and Alaska Native Issues.
Founded in 1944, the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) is the oldest, largest, and most representative American Indian and Alaska Native organization serving the broad interests of tribal governments and communities.
NCAI, a non-profit organization, advocates for a bright future for generations to come by taking the lead to gain consensus on a constructive and promising vision for Indian Country. The organization’s policy issues and initiatives are driven by the consensus of our diverse membership, which consists of American Indian and Alaska Native tribal governments, tribal citizens, individuals, and Native and non-Native organizations.
For nearly seven decades since its founding, NCAI has remained true to the original purpose of the organization: to be the unified voice of tribal nations. As outlined in the NCAI Constitution, our purpose is to serve as a forum for unified policy development among tribal governments in order to: (1) protect and advance tribal governance and treaty rights; (2) promote the economic development and health and welfare in Indian and Alaska Native communities; and (3) educate the public toward a better understanding of Indian and Alaska Native tribes.
Hundreds of current and historical texts from the National Defense University Press, which cover a variety of topics related to defense and national security.
The National Indian Law Library (NILL) of the Native American Rights Fund is a law library devoted to federal Indian and tribal law. NILL maintains a unique and valuable collection of Indian law resources and assists people with their Indian law-related research needs. You can find some of our most popular resources below.
THE MISSION OF THE NATIONAL REGISTRY OF EXONERATIONS is to provide comprehensive information on exonerations of innocent criminal defendants in order to prevent future false convictions by learning from past errors.
What we do: The Registry collects, analyzes and disseminates information about all known exonerations of innocent criminal defendants in the United States, from 1989 to the present. We publish their stories and we provide accessible, searchable online statistical data about their cases. We also conduct empirical studies of the process of exoneration and of factors that lead to the underlying wrongful convictions.
We study false convictions—their frequency, distribution, causes, costs and consequences—in order to educate policy makers and the general public about convictions of innocent defendants. We focus on exonerations because the only false convictions that we know about are those that end in exoneration.
We aim to be accurate, objective, transparent and accessible.
We rely entirely on publicly available information. We do not practice law or investigate cases of possible innocence. We do not collect, maintain or use confidential information of any sort, or work on behalf of any individuals. We do not make our own judgments about the guilt or innocence of convicted defendants. Our criteria for classifying cases as exonerations are based on official actions by courts and other government agencies.
Our primary goal is to reform the criminal justice system and reduce if not eliminate these tragic errors in the future. We also aim to make police officers, prosecutors, defense attorneys and judges more sensitive to the problem of wrongful convictions and more willing to reconsider the guilt of defendants who have already been convicted when new evidence of innocence comes to light.
Welcome to the Groups Registry. It was launched in October 2020, and existing cases are still being added. You can tell us about cases that should be included on this Registry by emailing us at info@exonerationlist.org
This is our third registry. It joins our main archive and our pre-1989 archive of individual exonerations. This new registry focuses on groups of defendants tied together by a common pattern of systematic official misconduct in the investigation and prosecution of these cases that undermined confidence in the defendants' convictions.
THE MISSION OF THE NATIONAL REGISTRY OF EXONERATIONS is to provide comprehensive information on exonerations of innocent criminal defendants in order to prevent future false convictions by learning from past errors.
What we do: The Registry collects, analyzes and disseminates information about all known exonerations of innocent criminal defendants in the United States, from 1989 to the present. We publish their stories and we provide accessible, searchable online statistical data about their cases. We also conduct empirical studies of the process of exoneration and of factors that lead to the underlying wrongful convictions.
We study false convictions—their frequency, distribution, causes, costs and consequences—in order to educate policy makers and the general public about convictions of innocent defendants. We focus on exonerations because the only false convictions that we know about are those that end in exoneration.
We aim to be accurate, objective, transparent and accessible.
We rely entirely on publicly available information. We do not practice law or investigate cases of possible innocence. We do not collect, maintain or use confidential information of any sort, or work on behalf of any individuals. We do not make our own judgments about the guilt or innocence of convicted defendants. Our criteria for classifying cases as exonerations are based on official actions by courts and other government agencies.
Our primary goal is to reform the criminal justice system and reduce if not eliminate these tragic errors in the future. We also aim to make police officers, prosecutors, defense attorneys and judges more sensitive to the problem of wrongful convictions and more willing to reconsider the guilt of defendants who have already been convicted when new evidence of innocence comes to light.
Our pre-1989 database is different from the Registry itself in two important respects: (i) The list of cases is less complete and less representative of all exonerations in its time period than our list of 2,180 exonerations since 1989, and (ii) We have less information on exonerations before 1989. Both differences reflect the difficulty of studying cases that are more than 30 years old.
With credibility built over more than 50 years of service, NARF has become a respected consultant to policy makers and others engaged in drafting legislation. As a consensus builder, NARF works with religious, civil rights, and other Native American organizations to shape the laws that will help assure the civil and religious rights of all Native Americans. NARF attorneys, many of whom are tribal citizens, use their understanding of Indian legal issues to assist tribes in negotiating with individuals, companies, and governmental agencies.
The Tribal Court Clearinghouse is a comprehensive website established in June 1997 to serve as a resource for American Indian and Alaska Native Nations, American Indian and Alaska Native people, tribal justice systems, victims services providers, tribal service providers, and others involved in the improvement of justice in Indian country. It is one of the most comprehensive websites on tribal justice system issues, and includes a wealth of tribal, state, and federal resources. The Clearinghouse website contains extensive resources on tribal, state, and federal law along with extensive Indian country subject-matter resources, a training events calendar, and resources from all Tribal Law and Policy Institute webinars.
We seek to facilitate the sharing of resources so that Native nations and tribal justice systems have access to cost effective resources which can be adapted to meet the individual needs of their communities. As such, we are proud to offer free digital copies of TLPI publications, work product created through various grants and partnerships since 1996.
TLPI has a long tradition of collaborating with other non-profits, governments, communities, and Native organizations. [W]e are pleased to offer the work product of our collaborative efforts in a sub category within each subject page.
USAspending is the official open data source of federal spending information, including information about federal awards such as contracts, grants, and loans.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) partners with others to support vaccine safety. Vaccination laws improve vaccine safety by providing vaccination rules for certain age groups and populations. The Public Health Law Program offers resources about state vaccination laws for health workers and their legal advisors.