The routine conversion of judicial citations to electronic pathways out from the text and targets for
citator links into opinions has a direct bearing on optimal citation placement or so it seems to me.
The Oxford Law
Citator links related content available on the service, updates the case and provides additional bibliographic references to outside sources.
Not exact matches
Furthermore, AI techniques can help build better
citators with limited human intervention, and
links between decisions can be tagged to reflect the treatment of cited decisions.
It contains the full text of just about every case ever decided, has a really good search engine, and has official pagination, internal
linking to the full text of every cited case, a built in Shepard's like
citator, which, with one click, will pull up every case that has cited the case you are viewing.
CanLEX is a a website which hosts some open APIs (application programming interface) that give tools for, among other things, automating
links to the CanLII Reflex
citator within a users documents... [more]
Oxford Law
Citator symbol provides
links to related case decisions (when available in Oxford Reports on International Law and other parts of the Encyclopedia.
This is complemented by the JustCite
citator, which currently indexes and
links to over 100 other data providers.