Over the summer, I had an opportunity to poll four Denver District Court judges about problems they encounter in the writing attorneys submit to their courtrooms. This column addresses one of their leading complaints
Court Review, the quarterly journal of the American Judges Association, invites the submission of un...
Despite some imperfections across disciplines, advice from well-known fiction and non-fiction writer...
This Article, written by the five-person faculty in the legal research and writing program at Wester...
The last Scrivener (November issue at page 2257) focused on a leading complaint that four Denver Dis...
A recent survey indicates that what troubles federal judges most is not what lawyers say but what th...
In this action, Plaintiffs sought a writ of mandamus compelling the offending judges to write better...
Whenever you send our a piece of paper or, nowadays, an email, your reputation flutters or flickers ...
Fortunately, some universals about legal audiences help make the task of defining good legal writing...
Criticism of legal writing has come with increasing frequency and stridency in recent years from law...
This column is the second in a series analyzing feedback from readers about what they believe is goo...
In October 2000, 90 of the 100 appellate and supreme court justices of California were attending the...
The first section of this Article discusses the judge as an author. This section begins with an exam...
In recent years, court opinions have chastised counsel’s briefs or other written submissions for suc...
With more than 30,000 judges in the United States alone, you’d expect to find an impressive array of...
To fine-tune legal writing courses to better prepare law students to enter legal practice, Professor...
Court Review, the quarterly journal of the American Judges Association, invites the submission of un...
Despite some imperfections across disciplines, advice from well-known fiction and non-fiction writer...
This Article, written by the five-person faculty in the legal research and writing program at Wester...
The last Scrivener (November issue at page 2257) focused on a leading complaint that four Denver Dis...
A recent survey indicates that what troubles federal judges most is not what lawyers say but what th...
In this action, Plaintiffs sought a writ of mandamus compelling the offending judges to write better...
Whenever you send our a piece of paper or, nowadays, an email, your reputation flutters or flickers ...
Fortunately, some universals about legal audiences help make the task of defining good legal writing...
Criticism of legal writing has come with increasing frequency and stridency in recent years from law...
This column is the second in a series analyzing feedback from readers about what they believe is goo...
In October 2000, 90 of the 100 appellate and supreme court justices of California were attending the...
The first section of this Article discusses the judge as an author. This section begins with an exam...
In recent years, court opinions have chastised counsel’s briefs or other written submissions for suc...
With more than 30,000 judges in the United States alone, you’d expect to find an impressive array of...
To fine-tune legal writing courses to better prepare law students to enter legal practice, Professor...
Court Review, the quarterly journal of the American Judges Association, invites the submission of un...
Despite some imperfections across disciplines, advice from well-known fiction and non-fiction writer...
This Article, written by the five-person faculty in the legal research and writing program at Wester...