This Article is an empirical study of what we call citation stickiness. A citation is sticky if it appears in one of the parties\u27 briefs and then again in the court\u27s opinion. Imagine that the parties use their briefs to toss citations in the court\u27s direction. Some of those citations stick and appear in the opinion—these are the sticky citations. Some of those citations don\u27t stick and go unmentioned by the court—these are the unsticky ones. Finally, some sources were never mentioned by the parties yet appear in the court\u27s opinion. These authorities are endogenous—they spring from the court itself. In a perfect adversarial world, the percentage of sticky citations in courts\u27 opinions would be something approaching 100%. ...
Citation literacy is the ability to read and write citations.[1] That’s it. The rest of this artic...
This article addresses the purpose of legal citations and presents a case for reforming citations in...
True, a judge probably won\u27t rule against you if your cites are wrong, but faulty cites do reflec...
This Article is an empirical study of what we call citation stickiness. A citation is sticky if it a...
This article seeks to answer two main questions. The first is whether courts cited the same cases as...
This article tests for the presence of bias in judicial citations within federal circuit court opini...
Can legal citations be stylish? Is that even a thing? Yes, and this Article explains why and how. Th...
This article discusses and analyzes the legal authorities that the Montana Supreme Court relies on i...
Academic legal writing is known for extensive citation. Generally, scholars who study citation pract...
Constant citation to legal authorities presents a unique problem for legal writers. Although these a...
Working with citations is a fact of life on law journals. Because citation work is detail-oriented, ...
This article tests for the presence of bias in judicial citations within federal circuit court opini...
Inserting citations to authorities into a text, in order to increase the persuasive power of it, and...
Citations are the cornerstone upon which judicial opinions and law review articles stand. Within thi...
This study provides an empirical, practical measure of the citation practices of the two highest cou...
Citation literacy is the ability to read and write citations.[1] That’s it. The rest of this artic...
This article addresses the purpose of legal citations and presents a case for reforming citations in...
True, a judge probably won\u27t rule against you if your cites are wrong, but faulty cites do reflec...
This Article is an empirical study of what we call citation stickiness. A citation is sticky if it a...
This article seeks to answer two main questions. The first is whether courts cited the same cases as...
This article tests for the presence of bias in judicial citations within federal circuit court opini...
Can legal citations be stylish? Is that even a thing? Yes, and this Article explains why and how. Th...
This article discusses and analyzes the legal authorities that the Montana Supreme Court relies on i...
Academic legal writing is known for extensive citation. Generally, scholars who study citation pract...
Constant citation to legal authorities presents a unique problem for legal writers. Although these a...
Working with citations is a fact of life on law journals. Because citation work is detail-oriented, ...
This article tests for the presence of bias in judicial citations within federal circuit court opini...
Inserting citations to authorities into a text, in order to increase the persuasive power of it, and...
Citations are the cornerstone upon which judicial opinions and law review articles stand. Within thi...
This study provides an empirical, practical measure of the citation practices of the two highest cou...
Citation literacy is the ability to read and write citations.[1] That’s it. The rest of this artic...
This article addresses the purpose of legal citations and presents a case for reforming citations in...
True, a judge probably won\u27t rule against you if your cites are wrong, but faulty cites do reflec...