Research legal scholarship across academic databases, format Bluebook citations, analyze competing arguments, and draft law review articles -- with source verification on every claim.
Search across academic databases for law review articles, legal scholarship, and interdisciplinary sources. CiteDash finds peer-reviewed legal research from Semantic Scholar, OpenAlex, CrossRef, and more -- helping you build stronger arguments with authoritative secondary sources.
Format legal citations following Bluebook conventions. CiteDash handles journal articles, books, and web sources in Bluebook style, and supports APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, Vancouver, and IEEE for interdisciplinary legal scholarship.
Analyze legal precedents and judicial reasoning with AI-powered research. CiteDash synthesizes findings from multiple sources, identifies conflicts between scholarly interpretations, and presents a balanced analysis of competing legal arguments.
Draft law review articles and seminar papers with properly cited arguments. Choose from 18 report tones including analytical, persuasive, critical, and comparative to match the conventions of legal scholarship.
Every claim links back to its original source. Automated hallucination detection flags unsupported assertions before they reach your brief or article. Full provenance tracking provides a complete audit trail.
Quick Summary for a case overview, Standard Research for a seminar paper, Deep Research for comprehensive law review scholarship, or Systematic Review for exhaustive doctrinal analysis.
Research a legal topic, find relevant scholarship, and draft a structured argument with proper citations -- in a fraction of the time.
Comprehensive secondary source research with conflict detection. Identify gaps in existing scholarship and build novel arguments.
Quick research on specific legal issues with persuasive tone. Find supporting and opposing scholarship to strengthen your arguments.
Use Review Q&A to generate practice questions from case readings and course materials. MCQ, essay, and short answer formats.
CiteDash excels at secondary source research -- finding and synthesizing law review articles, legal scholarship, and interdisciplinary academic sources. For primary case law research (case reporters, statutes, regulations), we recommend using CiteDash alongside dedicated legal databases like Westlaw or LexisNexis. The combination gives you the best of both worlds: efficient scholarly research with CiteDash and comprehensive primary law coverage from your law school's existing subscriptions.
Yes. CiteDash supports Bluebook citation formatting for academic legal sources including journal articles, books, and web sources. For case citations and statutes, we recommend verifying against the Bluebook manual as legal citation has complex rules that vary by jurisdiction and court.
CiteDash searches open academic databases (Semantic Scholar, OpenAlex, CrossRef, arXiv, PubMed, and more) rather than proprietary legal databases like Westlaw or LexisNexis. It excels at finding law review articles, legal scholarship, and interdisciplinary secondary sources. For primary case law research, use it alongside your law school's Westlaw/Lexis access.
Absolutely. CiteDash is particularly strong for the secondary source research that underpins law review articles. It searches across academic databases, synthesizes findings with inline citations, detects conflicts between scholarly positions, and exports to formats compatible with law review submission requirements.
CiteDash supports multiple report tones including analytical, persuasive, critical, and comparative -- all common in legal writing. The AI synthesizes sources into structured arguments with thesis statements, supporting evidence, counterarguments, and properly cited conclusions.
50 free credits, no credit card required. Find legal scholarship, format Bluebook citations, and verify every source.