Database Guides

Westlaw

Westlaw gives access to UK and international legal information.This includes cases, legislation, journals and E-Books.

The Index of Legal Terms lets you search law dictionaries.

Westlaw is the most comprehensive legal database available to RGU students. We recommend you begin your research here.


Accessing Westlaw

The quickest way to access Westlaw is at https://library.rgu.ac.uk/westlaw-database.

You will first need to log in using your RGU details.

If this is your first time visiting Westlaw, you will need to create a Thomson Reuters account to get access.

Westlaw will prompt you to do this on signing in for the first time. Fill out the details and follow instructions to create this account.

Please Note!

You only need to sign in using your RGU details in future.

You can follow the instructions below to sign in via the Westlaw homepage.

Signing in from Westlaw Homepage

Click Sign in.

Choose Access through academic institution.

Choose Robert Gordon University from the drop-down list:

You can then sign in using your Moodle details.


UK Law Cases

Access case law by selecting Cases at the top of the homepage.

If you have the citation of the case, you can type it (without punctuation) into the Citation box and click Search.

The case should appear in your results.

If you have the party names of the case, you can type them (without punctuation) into the Parties box and click Search.

The case should appear in your results.

To search for topics by keyword, enter them into the Subject/Keyword box and click Search.

A list of all cases relevant to your keywords should appear.

Click More Options below the search button to see more search fields you can use.

You can search for particular courts, or citations within cases.

In your results, you can view the case analysis or law report online, or download the document in PDF format.


UK Legislation

Access legislation by selecting Legislation at the top of the homepage.

If you know the title of the legislation, type it (without punctuation) into the Title box and click Search.

The legislation should appear in your results.

In Westlaw, there are icons that show the status of the legislation.

Selecting More options lets you search for legislation by keyword, jurisdiction or status.

Click the title of the legislation and select a section to view full text.

Some legislation is available to download in full as a PDF. If this is the case, you will see a grey PDF icon next to its title.

You can also download PDFs of parts of other legislation. Navigate to the section you wish to download and click the download link to the right of the page.


Journal Articles

Access law journals by selecting Journals at the top of the homepage.

You can enter your keyword(s) into the Subject/Keyword box and click Search.

If you know the name of the article, author or journal, you can type it into the relevant box and click Search.

More options lets you search for articles by date or legislation, cases and organisation(s) cited.

Once you've made an initial search, you can filter results using the options to the left of the page.

You can filter by topic, date, jurisdiction, availability, document type and publication.

Clicking Select Multiple Filters will allow you to apply several filters at once.

For full text articles, remember to apply the Full text available filter.

To download one or more articles, tick the box to the left hand side of the article(s) and click the download button at the top of your search.

You can access full text online by clicking the Full text option beneath the article's title.

You can download the article, cited articles or the journal issue by selecting the PDF icon to the right of the screen.

You may come across relevant articles that are not available in full text.

This does not always mean you cannot access the material. Try the following steps to see if the information is available elsewhere:

  • LibrarySearch: If you know the journal name, you can look in LibrarySearch. We may have the journal in print, or through another database.
  • Article Request: Online Learning students can request up to one article from a print journal issue. See our full range of options for online learners for more information.
  • Google Scholar: You can perform a Google Scholar search for the article name. See our grey literature guide for more information.

E-Books

Westlaw offers a collection of legal texts in E-Book format.

To access the E-Books section, navigate to the top of the page where it says Viewing: Westlaw UK.

Click on this, then choose Books.

You can enter keywords into the search box at the top of the screen.

You can filter results by topic, jurisdiction or publisher with the filters on the left of the page.

Remember to click Select multiple filters to apply more than one filter.

Once you have accessed a book, you can download a chapter/section in PDF format.

When viewing the full text of a chapter, select the download link to the right of the page.

You can add a book to your favourites by clicking the star icon next to the book's title in the table of contents.

You can access favourites by clicking the Favourite Books tab in the Books homepage.


EU Law

Access EU Law from the Westlaw homepage by selecting More, then European Union.

Westlaw's European Union page will open in a new tab on your browser.

You can enter keywords into the Search box to search for EU materials.

You can also browse documents by document type (cases, legislation, treaties etc.)

Selecting the Advanced Search option for any category allows you to search for documents by date, keyword, citation, parties etc.

You can download search results by ticking the boxes, then selecting download at the top of your results.


US Law

Westlaw offers some US law materials, including some law cases and journals.

To access these, select US from the Region list at the top of the page.

Westlaw's US materials page will open in a new tab in your browser.

You can search for US material using the Search bar at the top of the screen.

You can also browse jurisdiction, practice area or document type.

Selecting a category gives you further options. For example, selecting cases allows you to narrow by federal court/circuit or by state.

The Advanced link next to the search bar will take you to a search where you can search by keyword, date or citation.

Knowing the citation of a case, or the title of the legislation is the quickest route to full text.

When viewing full text of any document, click the download link at the top-right of the page.


Other International Law

Westlaw offers law from other international jurisdictions, including some cases and journals.

Log in and then select International from the Region drop-down list at the top of the screen.

Westlaw's International page will open in a new tab in your browser.

You can search using keywords, or browse by jurisdiction or document type.

Jurisdiction will give options to search through documents such as cases, legislation or journals.

Document type will allow you to narrow results by jurisdiction.

Clicking Advanced next to the Search bar will let you search by keyword, date or citation.

Knowing the citation for a case, or the title of the legislation is the quickest route to full text.

When viewing the full text, click the download link at the top-right of the page.


Advanced Searching

In Westlaw, you can apply search modifiers to broaden or narrow your search.

You can view these by selecting Terms and connectors in Cases, Legislation or Journal sections.

& or AND

Use this when combining two terms that must be included in the same results.

e.g. health & safety; health AND safety

OR

Use this when combining two terms that are included in the same results, or individually.

e.g. health OR safety

This will return results for health, safety, as well as health and safety together.

"Phrase Searching"

Use this when you want to search multiple keywords as a whole phrase.

e.g. "health and safety"

This will return results that contain the phrase "health and safety" as it appears.

Universal Character (*)

In Westlaw, an asterisk (*) replaces any letter in a word with all possible combinations.

e.g. legali*ation; wom*n

This will search for legalisation and legalization; or woman/women.

Root expander (!)

This will let you search for word variants based on plural or tense.

e.g. journalis!

This will search for journalist, journalists, journalism or journalistic simultaneously.

Pound symbol (#)

Preceding any term with the pound/hash symbol (#) will look for only that variant of the word as typed.

e.g. #journalist

The above example will look for journalist only, excluding journalists etc. from the search.

NOT (%)

Preceding any term with the percent symbol (%) will exclude that term from your search completely.

e.g. journalist %defamation

Grammatical Connectors (/s; +s; /p; +p)

Inserting /s between two terms will look for results containing both words in the same sentence.

e.g. defamation /s claim

Inserting +s between two terms will look for results containing the first term followed by the second in the same sentence.

e.g. defamation +s claim

Inserting /p between two terms will look for results containing both words in the same paragraph.

e.g. defamation /p claim

Inserting +p between two terms will look for results containing the first term followed by the second in in the same paragraph.

e.g. defamation +p claim

Numerical Connectors

Inserting /n between two terms will look for term 1 within n terms either before or after term 2.

So if n=3, then the first term would need to appear within 3 words of term 2 in either direction.

e.g. journalist /3 data.

So the word journalist would need to appear 3 words before or after the word data.

Inserting +n between two terms will look for term 1 within n terms preceding term 2.

So if n=5, then term 1 would need to appear 5 words before term 2.

e.g. journalist +5 data.

So the word journalist would need to appear 5 words in front of the word data.

Title Search TI()

Please Note: you can perform a title search easily by using the Title search field. The following will only work in the Free Text search field.

To perform a free text search of words that appear in an article title, you can use TI(keyword1 keyword2).

e.g. TI(defamation act)

This will look for articles that have the words defamation and act in the title. 

For more advice on searching databases, take a look at our Search Techniques page.