International Privacy, Security & Cyber Law

Online Resource Collections by Topic

Department of Justice

The search feature at the DOJ website for the OLC opinions does not search full text, it only searches the titles and brief headnote summaries.  See example search for “voting” below:

Preemption Check or Thorough Research

Find Articles and Book Chapters

To do a preemption check to ensure that no one else has written on the topic that you have in mind, you will want to do some thorough research. A logical way to do this is to start with the easiest full-text databases to search across many law journal articles at once. Each of these databases has a different collection of law journals, and sometimes there will be overlap. After running searches in full-text databases, you will want to search some free databases where people publish articles before they are officially published. Then you will want to search the Indexes, these databases cover a wider variety of journals, some of which will be outside of the scope of the full-text databases. Indexes largely provide you with information about the article, and usually have an abstract that will let you know whether or not the article is on your topic. If you want to see the full text of these articles, you may need to place an interlibrary loan if they are not available in the UC Law SF full-text databases.

Full-Text Databases

Multidisciplinary Databases

These resources may be useful to ensure that your topic has not been written in a non-law journal, but these databases may also be useful later when you are doing research for your paper, because you may want to use knowledge (including statistics) from other disciplines to support your arguments.

Databases containing prepublication drafts of forthcoming articles

Search Indexes

If you want to be thorough in your searching, or if you are having difficulty finding relevant articles, you can try searching a journal index. Index searches are only search the title or abstract of the article, (NOT a full-text search).  

Advantages and Disadvantages to using an Index
Advantages to Index Searching Disadvantages to Index Searching
Legal periodical indexes allow you to search nearly all U.S. law review articles from 1918 to present. Therefore, searching these indexes allows you to search more journal articles than you can search in Lexis or Westlaw. After you find the citation, you still need to find the full-text.
Good for historical research. Your search is limited to title and abstract.
Index searching can help you eliminate many irrelevant articles from your full-text search results. But after you find the citation, you then need to find the full-text.  

Once you find a citation to an article, search for the full-text in the UC law SF Law Library's e-Journals List.

Citations and Abbreviations

If you have a citation and you cannot decipher what the abbreviation means, you can use:

To determine if UC Law SF has online access to a journal.

Search for the by journal title in:

You can also search for the journal title in:

Find articles in collections at other libraries

You can search for articles that may not be in the UC Law SF collections, using:

Obtain the full-text to articles that you have identified in Indexes, WorldCat or Google Scholar that are not in the UC Law SF Collection

If an article you have found is not in:

Find Books on your Topic at UC Law SF

UC Law SF Library offers extensive resources for legal research, including print & e-books. If you do not see the books that you need, you can borrow books from other institutions via interlibrary loans.

Use the advanced search feature for more complex title, author and subject searching. A few sample searches are provided below. You can use these search terms in other sources to find relevant books and articles.

A select Bibliography of titles on Privacy, Security, and Cyber Law books available at UC Law SF are provided below. To find similar books, examine the catalog records for these materials and use similar language in your searches. 

To find books from outside of the UC Law SF Library Collection, you can use these same subject headings from the searches above to find books in:

Or run key word searches in the full text of books in:

Google Book Search

If you find a book that you want to read, but it is not in our library, you can place an Interlibrary Loan. See:

Select Bibliography of Books: International Privacy, Security & Cyber Law

Study Aids

To get an overview of the field. Start by scanning the contents page.

Treatises/Books 

Some are online. Look at the Call number field.

Practice Guides/Looseleaf Sets

Some are online, look for the database icons

Treaties