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Undergraduate Legal Writing: an Open Resource
  • Undergraduate Legal Writing: an Open Resource (version 2)
  • Getting Started
    • Course Overview
    • Succeeding in Legal Writing
    • The Legal Reader
  • Essential Concepts and Skills
    • Sources of Law and Court Systems
    • How to Read Case Opinions
    • Briefing Cases
    • Rule-Based Writing and CREAC
    • Rule-Based Writing and CREAC, adding Analogies
    • Legal Citation: Basic Concepts and Moves
  • Advice and Examples
    • Predictive Memoranda
    • Client Letters
    • Mediation Statements
    • Motions
  • References
    • References
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Undergraduate Legal Writing: an Open Resource (version 2)

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Last updated 6 months ago

Last updated: 12.17.24

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License and is indebted to other CC-licensed works from which it draws material:

  • Nan L. Haynes, Legal Writing Handbook for Clinical Students, published by CALI eLangdell® Press, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license. CALI® and eLangdell® are United States federally registered trademarks owned by The Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction.

  • Brian N. Larson, Legal Argumentation Reasoning and Writing About the Law, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.

  • Jean Mangan, et. al., Legal Writing Manual, 3d ed, CC BY-NC-SA 4.10 license.

Unless otherwise indicated, third-party texts, images, and other materials quoted in this resource are included based on fair use as described in the Code of Best Practices for Fair Use in Open Education.

Suggestions, typos, etc.: drewml@stedwards.edu

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