Overview

Zotero is a reference manager.  You can use Zotero to store, organize, and cite references such as monographs, scholarly articles, webpages, case law, and statutes from your research.

Zotero is a service of the Corporation for Digital Scholarship, based in Vienna, Virginia, which supports free and open source software for academic research.

Install Zotero

First, download the Zotero desktop software to your computer.

Second, install the browser extension.

Zotero downloads page

 

After installation of the browser extension, a Zotero icon should be in your web browser's toolbar (indicated in the images below by a red circle). Depending upon the web page you are on, the icon may look different.

If Zotero detects a book on the webpage, the icon looks like a book:Chrome browser toolbar with Zotero book icon

For an article, the icon looks like a white page:

Chrome browser toolbar with Zotero article icon

For multiple sources, the icon looks like a file folder:

Chrome browser toolbar with Zotero folder icon

For a webpage, the icon looks like a gray page. Zotero displays this icon when it does not detect a source (article/book/etc.) on the page:

Chrome browser toolbar with Zotero webpage icon

Now, you can start adding sources to Zotero Collections. See the Add a Collection page in this guide for more instructions on how to name a new collection for your research project.

Or, visit the Zotero Quick Start Guide to learn in more detail about how to use tags and collections in Zotero to organize your references.

Subject Guide

Profile Photo
Cornell Law Library
Contact:
Myron Taylor Hall
Website

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons License
Zotero for Legal References is based on a guide by Latia Ward and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.