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Guide to Review Aids for Law Students : Home

This Library Guide presents a comprehensive list of all study aids or study guides available to Michigan States University College of Law students. It includes materials in a variety of formats: print, electronic, and audio. The resources are meant to enh

Review Aids

The task of understanding the complexities of the law is the challenge of every law student; its arcane language, rules, procedures, formats, jurisdictions, statutes, and cases. The good news is a wide variety of resources have been developed  to assist in that challenge. The John F. Schaefer Law Library offers study guides in many different formats including books, flashcards, audio recordings, and electronic resources. This Library Guide will direct you to all study aids available to Michigan State University College of Law students. 

Free Legal Sources

Free legal sources are out there.  There are a lot of free ways to get laws and cases.   And Wikipedia has articles about many subjects, including legal topics. 

The quality of the sources that you find matters though.  Sometimes what you find may be out of date and not talking about what the law is now.  Often you will find a free source that talks about the area of law that you want, but it does not go into enough detail.  And you have to be able to trust what you are finding is good information.

You will want to find sources that are

  • Up to date
  • Detailed
  • Written by experts

Free Secondary Sources are hard to find that meet all those requirements.  But free primary sources (for instance, laws) are often provided online by the government. 

Secondary Sources talk about the law.  They are not the actual law.  So a book, magazine, or website that explains what the law is would be a Secondary Source.  It is usually best to start research with Secondary Sources.

Some types of Secondary Sources include

  • Websites
  • Books
  • Journal articles
  • Newspapers

Many of these are available on the internet for free. 

Primary Sources are the actual law.  While by the end of your legal research, you will want to have found some Primary Sources, it is hard to start good research by diving into Primary Sources.

Why not start with directly searching for laws?  Because there may be laws in many different places and forms.  Having so many sources of laws can be confusing, and the Secondary Sources may be able to help you find the right law. 

If you do have to start research with a Primary Source, court opinions are better to start with because if you find one on point, it may directly reference other laws you may then investigate.

Some types of Primary Sources include:

  • Federal Statutes
  • Federal Regulations
  • Federal Court Opinions
  • State Statutes
  • State Regulations
  • State Court Opinions
  • Local Ordinances

Most of these Primary Sources are available online for free through the government or other reliable websites.

Librarian

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Tim Innes
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