What is LexisNexis?

LexisNexis is a world-famous database that is used by the legal departments of many famous law schools, law firms, and high-tech companies around the world. The database links to 4 billion documents, 11,439 databases and 36,000 sources, with data updated daily.

Database content:

Legal research content: U.S. federal and state government cases (including full-text cases of about 300 years); U.S. Supreme Court cases (from 1790 to the present); U.S. Supreme Court cases Court appeal cases; U.S. district and state court cases and judgments; all federal laws and regulations; 50 state statutes; law reviews (papers from more than 450 review magazines); European federal laws; patent database (included since 1980 The full text of European, American and Japanese patents), laws, regulations and cases of Commonwealth countries, relevant cases and provisions of the WTO, other legal topics, etc.

Newspapers, magazines, academic journals: the LexisNexis news service draws from more than 9,000 data sources around the world. Material types include major newspapers, international magazines, academic journals and other services. Academic journals include a full set of ABI Inform full-text materials.

Information content of the corporate world: including industry, company, financial and other aspects of information; company information includes SEC file proportion analysis, subsidiary-related affairs, employees, managers, stock price settings and mergers and acquisitions, etc. .