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Study hard, for the well is deep, and our brains are shallow.
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Legal Definitions - Order of authorities
A judge is a law student who marks his own examination papers.
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Definition of Order of authorities
Definition: In formal legal writing, the order of authorities refers to the sources used to validate claims made by the author of the paper. The sources should be arranged according to their order of importance, in accordance with Bluebook Rule 1.4.
Examples:
- Constitutions - U.S. Federal Constitution, U.S. state constitutions, foreign constitutions, and foundational documents of the United Nations, League of Nations, and European Union.
- Statutes - Federal, state, and foreign statutes arranged alphabetically by jurisdiction and by codification order.
- Treaties and other international agreements - arranged by most recently enacted first and continue towards earliest, except foundational documents of the United Nations, League of Nations, and European Union.
- Cases - arranged by federal, state, foreign, and international courts and agencies, with the most recent decision first and continue towards oldest.
- Legislative materials - arranged by bills and resolutions, committee hearings, reports, documents, and committee prints, and floor debates.
- Administrative and executive materials - arranged by federal, state, and foreign materials, with the most recently enacted first and continue towards earliest.
- Intergovernmental organizations' resolutions, decisions, and regulations - arranged by United Nations and League of Nations, and other organizations alphabetically by name.
- Records, briefs, and petitions - arranged by the court where filed, using the order of courts given in Section 4 ("Cases") above.
- Secondary materials - arranged by uniform codes, model codes, and restatements, books, pamphlets, and shorter works in a collection of works by a single author, journal work not written by students, book reviews not written by students, student-written material from law reviews and journals, annotations, magazine and newspaper articles, working papers, unpublished materials that are not forthcoming, and electronic sources.
These examples illustrate the order of authorities in legal writing. The sources are arranged in a specific order, depending on their importance and relevance to the topic being discussed. This helps to ensure that the author's claims are properly supported and validated by authoritative sources.
Law school: Where you spend three years learning to think like a lawyer, then a lifetime trying to think like a human again.
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Simple Definition
It's every lawyer's dream to help shape the law, not just react to it.
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