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Legal Taxonomy From Sweet & Maxwell
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 September 2010
Abstract
Mark Scott and Nigel Smith provide the background to the development of Sweet & Maxwell's Legal Taxonomy before outlining its structure and explaining how it is used by Sweet & Maxwell and other Thomson Reuters companies.
Keywords
- Type
- Cat, Class and Metadata.....Part 2
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The British and Irish Association of Law Librarians 2010
References
Footnotes
1 Sainsbury, I.M. (1974) Legal Subject Headings for Libraries. London, ButterworthsGoogle Scholar.
2 Krieger, T. (1982) Subject Headings for the Literature of Law and International Law. 3rd ed.Littleton, RothmanGoogle Scholar.
3 Moys, E.M. (1982) Moys Classification Scheme for Law Books. 2nd ed.London, ButterworthsGoogle Scholar.
4 Smith, N. and Miskin, C. (1987) A Legal Thesaurus. Hebden Bridge, Legal Information ResourcesGoogle Scholar. Miskin, C. (2001) A Legal Thesaurus. 4th ed. (Fourth Revision). Hebden Bridge, Sweet & MaxwellGoogle Scholar.
5 Smith and Miskin. (1987) Legal Thesaurus, introduction.
6 Smith, N. (1989) Indexing Legal Journals. Law Librarian, 20(1), 1–6.Google Scholar
7 Miskin, C. (1997) A Legal Thesaurus. 3rd ed.Hebden Bridge, Legal Information ResourcesGoogle Scholar, p.ii.
8 http://2.sweetandmaxwell.co.uk/online/taxonomy/ [as at 30 November 2009].
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