LEGAL RESEARCH
Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in
each of the black spaces below before clicking
on it to display the answer.
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Sources of Law: (federal and state) #1 | Constitutions
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Sources of Law: (federal and state) #2 | Statutes
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Sources of Law: (federal and state) #3 | Court Opinions (often referred to as cases)
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Sources of Law: (federal and state) #4 | Administrative rules and regulations
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US Constitution #1 | Executive Branch- Administrative Regulations
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US Constitution #2 | Legislative Branch-Statutes
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US Constitution #3 | Judicial Branch-Court opinions/cases
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Court Structure (US) #1 | US District Court (LA)
* Middle – Baton Rouge
* Eastern – New Orleans
* Western – Lafayette
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Court Structure (US) #2 | US Courts of Appeals (LA-5th Circuit) – New Orleans
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Court Structure (US) #3 | US Supreme Court – Washington, DC
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Court Structure (LA) #1 | Trial Courts: 49 City Courts
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Court Structure (LA) #2 | Trial Courts: 3 Parish
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Court Structure (LA) #3 | Trial Courts: 1 Family
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Court Structure (LA) #4 | Trial Courts: 4 Juvenile
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Court Structure (LA) #5 | Trial Courts: 42 District Courts
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Court Structure (LA) #6 | Trial Courts: 250 Mayor’s Courts
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Court Structure (LA) #7 | Trial Courts: 382 Justice of Peace Courts
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Court Structure (LA) #8 | Court of Appeal LA: 1st Circuit – Baton Rouge
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Court Structure (LA) #9 | Court of Appeal LA: 2nd Circuit – Shreveport
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Court Structure (LA) #10 | Court of Appeal LA: 3rd Circuit – Lake Charles
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Court Structure (LA) #11 | Court of Appeal LA: 4th Circuit – New Orleans
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Court Structure (LA) #12 | Court of Appeal LA: 5th Circuit – Gretna
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Court Structure (LA) #13 | LA Supreme Court – New Orleans
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Type and Weight of Authority | Primary vs. Secondary Authority
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Type and Weight of Authority | Mandatory vs. Persuasive
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Primary Authority | Primary Authority is the term used to describe rules of law.
* Include: constitutional provisions. Statutes, court opinions, and administrative rules
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Secondary Authority | Secondary Authority refers to commentary on the law or analysis of the law
* Include: Articles written about law, law reviews, etc.
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Mandatory | Mandatory authority refers to authority that the court is obligated to follow.
* Contains rules that you must apply to determine the correct answer to the issue you are researching.
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Persuasive | Persuasive authority refers to authority that the court may follow if it is persuaded to do so, but no required to follow.
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Status (Primary vs. Secondary & Mandatory vs. Persuasive) Rules #1 | Secondary authority – always persuasive
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Status (Primary vs. Secondary & Mandatory vs. Persuasive) Rules #2 | Primary authority – sometimes mandatory, sometimes persuasive
* Level of the Court
* Jurisdiction
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Source Driven Research Planning | Jurisdiction – Type of Authority – Content
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Content Driven Research Planning | Specific – Jurisdiction – Type of Authority
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Developing a Research Plan #1 | Define the scope of your research project and the issue(s) you need to research
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Developing a Research Plan #2 | Generate a list of search terms specific to your research issue(s)
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Developing a Research Plan #3 | Plan your research path for each issue
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Developing a Research Plan #4 | Execute your research plan to search for relevant information
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Developing a Research Plan #5 | Assess the information you find and update your research to ensure that all the information is current
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Developing a Research Plan #6 | Revise your search terms and research plan as necessary and repeat the search process to complete your understanding on your research issue.
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Citing of Legal Authority #1 | The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation
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Citing of Legal Authority #2 | ALWD Citation Manuel: A professional System of Citation
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The Bluebook | * Bluepages and corresponding Bluepages Tables
* Text of the Citation rules in the Rules section of the Bluebook
* Tables
* Finding tools for locating individual citation rules
* Blue Tips and Bluebook updates
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The ALWD Manual | * Table of Contents and Index
* Text of the Citation Rules
* Appendices
* “Fast Formats” and “Snapshots”
* ALWD Manual website
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Created by:
MEBrock
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