Interlibrary Loan is a service of the library that can be used when you need a copy of a journal article, newspaper article, conference proceedings, or when you want to borrow a book, microform, or video that is not available from one of the University of Utah libraries (check the library catalog first). The Interlibrary Loan staff will do its best to get a copy or borrow an item for you from another library outside the campus.
Document Delivery is a service for law faculty only. Document Delivery refers to the materials that are available at one of the University of Utah libraries and which the Document Delivery staff will retrieve for the faculty.
ILLiad is the name of the program used to manage all interlibrary loan and document delivery requests.
The Interlibrary Loan service is only available to law faculty, law students, law staff and visiting scholars who have an active circulation account with the S. J. Quinney Law Library. Main Campus and School of Health Sciences patrons are referred to the Marriott and Eccles Health Libraries respectively.
The ILL service is not available to public individuals. We will honor the requests for loans from other libraries. Public patrons must obtain ILL service through the library with whom they are affiliated.
Interlibrary Loan provides access to most books or microforms, photocopies of journal articles or newspaper articles, and other research materials not owned by the S. J. Quinney Law Library, Marriott Library or Eccles Health Sciences library unless they are checked out, at the bindery, or declared as lost or missing from one of these University libraries.
Materials that usually cannot be obtained include:
Entire issues or volumes of journals
Reference or reserve books
Rare books or valuable material such as manuscripts
If the materials you need are checked out to another patron, you have the following options:
Contact the Circulation Desk and request a hold or recall to be placed on the item that you need. You will be notified within 10 days depending on how soon the item is returned.
Consult with the Reference Desk for alternative sources (E-journal).
Faculty may send their document delivery requests to docdelivery@law.utah.edu directly (please note that you need to use the full address) or can enter their requests via ILLiad.
In order to learn how to enter requests through ILLiad, read these Request Instructions.
On average, it takes approximately two weeks for the lending library to fill an ILL request depending on the location of the library and the availability of the item at the other libraries. If the library is close or if their staff is very efficient, you may get it in as little as three days. If not, it may take longer.
You are strongly encouraged to submit requests well in advance of the project deadlines since some items are difficult or impossible to obtain through Interlibrary Loan. Go to the "View/Modify Outstanding Requests" page when you log into ILLiad to find out the status of your requests.
Students and Staff: Books can be picked up at the Library's Circulation Desk. Photocopies will be delivered electronically through ILLiad for you to retrieve. Faculty: Books will be delivered to your mailboxes and photocopies will be delivered electronically through ILLiad for you to retrieve.
Instead of receiving a paper copy of an article you request, you will receive access to an electronic version of the article online and you will not need to come to the library to retrieve it if you have access to a computer and the internet.
The loan period for item(s) borrowed through Interlibrary Loan is determined by the lending library and is usually 2-4 weeks. The item due date will be listed on the book band or book label when you receive your requested item. You can also find the due date on your "View/Renew Checked Out Items" page when you log into Illiad.
All materials borrowed through the S. J. Quinney Law Library's Interlibrary Loan service must be returned directly to the S. J. Quinney Law Library ILL office or Library Circulation Desk. They should not be returned through campus mail, other libraries, or to the library drop box. If the materials are not returned properly, you will be held responsible for any overdue fees or lost book fees.