Title: Writing a Student Article
1Writing a Student Article
- Based on Eugene Volokh, Academic Legal Writing
Law Review Articles, Student Notes, and Seminar
Papers
2Note to Presenters
- This material is just a starting point that you
might find useful. - It has more slides that youll want to usejust
choose the ones you like. - Update these as you please, adding, deleting, or
modifying various items.
3Note to Presenters (cont.)
- Check the Notes fields on many of these slides,
for instance by printing out the slides with the
Print What option set to Notes Pages. - These notes give you tips on what you might say
as youre presenting the slide.
4Note to Presenters (cont.)
- You might give this talk in several phases For
instance, - the material on finding a claim before summer
break, - the material on writing and structure after, and
- the material on cite-checking in a separate talk.
5Note to Presenters (cont.)
- For more information on each slide, see the book
page noted in the heading. - Encourage listeners to also refer to that page if
they have more questions. - Before giving this presentation, refresh your
recollection of the book by skimming the
referenced page. The slide text only contains a
brief summary of the pointits up to you to
provide more details orally.
6Note to Presenters (cont.)
- The slides usually give general points.
- Definitely include concrete illustrations, but I
find theyre best presented orally. - The book gives plenty of examples, but you might
also come up with your own.
7Step 1 Find Problem Possible Sources (p. 11)
- Cases youve read for class that leave things
unresolved. - Class discussions that intrigued you.
- Questions in casebooks.
- New S. Ct. cases that create/leave open issues.
- Advice from faculty members.
- Westlaw Bulletin (WLB) and similar databases.
- http//www.lawtopic.org.
8Step 2 Do Research (p. 63)
- Identify sample cases and incidents.
- Get the big picture Read a short book on the
subject (e.g., Concepts and Insights, Nutshell,
Understanding). - Get the details Read treatise(s).
- Get the details Fully read all the cases and
statutory provisions that are relevant. - Find other articles (literature search).
9Step 3 Build Test Suite (p. 19)
- The test suite will help you identify sound
solution to your problem. - Problem When should religious objectors get
exemptions from paternalistic laws? - You came up with problem because you were
outraged about people being denied religious
exemptions from peyote bans.
10Include in Test Suite (p. 22)
- Dont just think about how the proposal affects
peyote bans consider a broader set of test
cases - bans on assisted suicide
- bans on dueling
- bans on drinking poison or handling snakes
- motorcycle helmet laws.
11Creating Test Suite (p. 22)
- Plausible cases (good to draw them from real
incidents). - Cases that track the famous precedents.
- Cases that you know are hard cases for your
thesis. - Cases that yield different bottom-line results.
- Cases involving issues that appeal to different
political perspectives.
12Step 4 Identify Claim (p. 9)
- Claim solution to your problem.
- Come up with claim that is
- sound yields results that you think are right
when applied to your test suite - novel
- nonobvious
- useful.
13Soundness (p. 20)
- Applying your proposal to your test suite cases
might suggest that the proposal is - mistaken, and needs changing or narrowing
- too vague, and needs clarifying
- produces unexpected insights that are worth
explaining - reaches the right results, which are worth
highlighting.
14Novelty (p. 13)
- Your claim should be a novel solution to problem.
- New to everyone, not just to you Youre trying
to add to the body of professional knowledge. - Best to have a novel claim.
- But a novel justification will do, too.
- Look for special nuances present in some
situations within your broad topicnuances that
let you say the rule should be X in these cases,
but Y in those.
15Nonobviousness (p. 15)
- Your proposal needs to add something new to our
knowledge of a field (novelty). - But it also has to be something that isnt that
easy to figure out. - Example Claims about new statutes are often
novel, but they might be obvious.
16Utility (p. 15)
- Maximize the usefulness of your proposal
- Dont limit yourself to one state.
- Discuss the issue, not a particular case.
- Try to make claims that are useful to lawyers,
judges, and academics. - Try to make politically plausible claims.
17Making Article More Useful (p. 15)
- Dont fight binding Supreme Court precedent.
- Instead, focus on questions that the precedent
creates or leaves unanswered. - Apply argument to other jurisdictions (e.g.,
state constitutions, not just the federal one). - Incorporate prescriptive implications (what
should be done) of your descriptive findings
(what is true or what has happened).
18You Might Want to Avoid (p. 28)
- Articles that pose problem without solving it.
- Articles that merely explain what the law is.
- Case notes. Discuss issue, not case.
- Responses to others works. Discuss issue, not
someone elses article. - Single-state articles.
- Topics that Court or Congress may visit soon, and
thus preempt.
19Step 5 Write Introduction (p. 31)
- The most important part of the article
- Persuades some people to read further.
- Summarizes claim for those who wont read
further. - Provides a frame through which those who do read
further will interpret what follows.
20Writing Introduction (p. 31)
- Write first, then rewrite after article is done.
- Show theres a problem.
- Do this with concrete examples.
- Briefly state the claim.
- Briefly show novelty, nonobviousness, utility,
soundness. - Do this quickly and forcefullycut to the chase.
21Step 6 Write Background Explanation Section (p.
34)
- Keep it as short as possible.
- Dont describe each precedent synthesize them.
- Avoid unnecessary historical discussion.
- Focus most of your article on the value youre
adding to the field, - not on a restatement of what courts or
commentators have already said, which is what
such sections usually provide.
22Step 7 Prove Your Claim (p. 35)
- Prove that the result is the right under the
statute or the caselaw and that it makes good
policy sense. - Use concrete examples.
- The test suite is a good source of these.
- Turn problems to your advantage, rather than just
ignoring them. - Look for unexpected implications of your analysis.
23Turning Problems to Your Advantage (p. 36)
- Dont say this is the only interpretation of the
cases / text / facts. - Say this is the best interpretation, because . .
. . - Dont say this proposal has no costs.
- Say this does cause some problems / sacrifice
the government interest in some measure / create
some uncertainty, but thats OK because . . . .
24More on Problems (p. 36)
- Confronting the problems can lead you to refine
your claim, - thus making more novel, nonobvious, and useful.
- Acknowledging uncertainty can make your argument
more persuasive. - Acknowledging uncertainty can make you seem more
sensible and worldly.
25Step 8 Connect to Broader Issues (p. 38)
- Import ideas from related fields
- (e.g., borrow from free speech law in discussing
what right-to-bear-arms law should look like) - Import ideas from broader fields
- (e.g., borrow from broad theories of rights or
of constitutional interpretation)
26Connecting (cont.)
- Export to related fields insights drawn from your
analysis - (e.g., how does your opinion on waiting periods
for gun purchases bear on waiting periods for
abortions, voting, parades, etc.?) - Export to broader fields
- (e.g., what do the problems with applying strict
scrutiny here show about the weaknesses of strict
scrutiny generally?)
27Connecting (cont.)
- Connect to subsidiary questions
- (e.g., what are the procedural implications of
your substantive proposal?). - Ask what practical implications your proposal
will have - (e.g., how will legislatures react if your
constitutional proposal is implemented?)
28Step 9 Writing (p. 69)
- Your readers are very busy its much easier for
them to put your article down than to keep
reading it. - Therefore, avoid
- redundancy
- legalese
- surplusage and platitudes
- meandering paragraphs and sections.
29Better Writing Through Editing (p. 69)
- Nothing is ever writtenit is rewritten.
- Go through many drafts.
- Edit on paper.
- In the first draft, try to find at least one
correction or improvement for each paragraph. - If you need to reread something to understand it,
rewrite it. - Finish first draft quickly, so you can do many
more.
30Using Other Editors Effectively (p. 72)
- Ask friends to read the piece and give you
editing suggestions. - Give your professor a rough draft that youve
already closely proofread. - Give the draft to the professor as early as
possible. - Treat each editing comment as a global suggestion.
31Summary
- Find a problem.
- Do your research.
- Create a test suite.
- Identify your claim.
- Write Introduction.
- Write background explanation section.
- Prove your claim.
- Connect to broader issues.
- Edit, edit, edit.