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Update: Custom Google Search of Canadian Law Firms

I have made the following enhancements to my Custom Google Search of Canadian Law Firms available at http://tinyurl.com/canadianlawfirms [1]:

– Renamed the site to “Search Canadian Law Firm Websites, Blogs & Journals”

– added 28 more law firms to include boutiques and regional (smaller) firms for a total of 79 Canadian law firms (and I broadened URLs to include subdomains of law firms [e.g., lawfirm.ca instead of http://lawfirm.ca/*]).

– added 205 Canadian law-related blogs

– added 20 Canadian law journal websites, the BC Courthouse Library and the CBA and CBAO

– added refinement tags to refine search results to publications (law firm publications), blogs or journals

I am still investigating other options, including adding more journal websites and improving refinements.

I am happy with the 79 Canadian law firm website chosen so far since, based on the Pareto principle, the firms I have chosen likely represent the majority of quality commentary in law firm bulletins. Drew Jackson at the BC Courthouse Library was kind enough to do a review here [2] of my search engine (comparing it to Fee Fie Foe Firm [3] and Lexology [4]; however, I was not able to verify how Drew determined that Fee Fie Foe Firm searches 1500 Canadian law firm websites. If that number is correct, I assume Fee Fie Foe Firm is merely scraping URLs from some sort of list because I could not come close to trying to add that many Canadian law firm websites. Although my list of 79 law firm sites is not likely perfect (i.e., I may be missing some firms who produce commentary of possible interest), I like to think that I was careful in choosing “quality” over “quantity” in my site selection. I also like the fact that my site does not have advertisements, which tend to be annoying.

If SLAW readers spot problems or want to recommend sites that I should be adding, I am open to suggestions (it is fairly easy to tell if a site is not included – simply go to a site directly and find some unique phrase on that site and then search on that phrase on my search engine and if you do not get a result, the site is not likely included).

It appears that my site, among other things, picks up the abstracts from the Canadian Bar Review and other journals (although researchers should not use my search as a replacement for proper journal searching using the various print or online (for a fee) journal indexes or full-text journal databases (for a fee).

I like the “date filter” that Fee Fie Foe Firm Canada [3] has. If I understand Custom Google Search correctly (and I may not – some of it is complicated), I would need to ask SLAW to host my search engine if I wanted to add the date filter (i.e., I could not find a way adding the date filter when the custom search is hosted on Google, as my search currently is). The other advantage of SLAW hosting it would be an improved “look and feel” to the search page.