Can legal citations be stylish? Is that even a thing? Yes, and this Article explains why and how. The usual approach to writing citations is as a separate, inferior part of the writing process, a perfunctory task that satisfies a convention but is not worth the attention that stylish writers spend on the “real” words in their documents. This Article argues that the usual approach is wrong. Instead, legal writers should strive to write stylish legal citations—citations that are fully integrated with the prose to convey information in a readable way to a legal audience
This article looks at the phenomenon of legal citation and its unintended consequences. After consi...
Ipropose that judges, in their opinions, put citations in footnotes and generally abstain from using...
This Article is an empirical study of what we call citation stickiness. A citation is sticky if it a...
Can legal citations be stylish? Is that even a thing? Yes, and this Article explains why and how. Th...
New lawyers and law students spend a lot of time worrying about legal citation. But most of that tim...
In times past, entirely handwritten documents represented the vast majority of holographic wills. Th...
Lawyers love thinking about writing. We love it so much that this issue of the Litigation and Trial ...
In this column for Kentucky Bar Association\u27s magazine (B&B - Bench & Bar), Professor Hazelwood m...
Constant citation to legal authorities presents a unique problem for legal writers. Although these a...
Let\u27s face it-legal citations can interrupt the flow of sentences and make them harder to read. I...
Working with citations is a fact of life on law journals. Because citation work is detail-oriented, ...
True, a judge probably won\u27t rule against you if your cites are wrong, but faulty cites do reflec...
Academic legal writing is known for extensive citation. Generally, scholars who study citation pract...
This article addresses the purpose of legal citations and presents a case for reforming citations in...
Good citation requires critical analysis because well-supposed legal analysis requires a layered und...
This article looks at the phenomenon of legal citation and its unintended consequences. After consi...
Ipropose that judges, in their opinions, put citations in footnotes and generally abstain from using...
This Article is an empirical study of what we call citation stickiness. A citation is sticky if it a...
Can legal citations be stylish? Is that even a thing? Yes, and this Article explains why and how. Th...
New lawyers and law students spend a lot of time worrying about legal citation. But most of that tim...
In times past, entirely handwritten documents represented the vast majority of holographic wills. Th...
Lawyers love thinking about writing. We love it so much that this issue of the Litigation and Trial ...
In this column for Kentucky Bar Association\u27s magazine (B&B - Bench & Bar), Professor Hazelwood m...
Constant citation to legal authorities presents a unique problem for legal writers. Although these a...
Let\u27s face it-legal citations can interrupt the flow of sentences and make them harder to read. I...
Working with citations is a fact of life on law journals. Because citation work is detail-oriented, ...
True, a judge probably won\u27t rule against you if your cites are wrong, but faulty cites do reflec...
Academic legal writing is known for extensive citation. Generally, scholars who study citation pract...
This article addresses the purpose of legal citations and presents a case for reforming citations in...
Good citation requires critical analysis because well-supposed legal analysis requires a layered und...
This article looks at the phenomenon of legal citation and its unintended consequences. After consi...
Ipropose that judges, in their opinions, put citations in footnotes and generally abstain from using...
This Article is an empirical study of what we call citation stickiness. A citation is sticky if it a...