SPP 494DI Public Policy Capstone Lab
Citation management
- ZoteroZotero is a free, open source citation management software that includes browser extensions and word processor add-ons.
- Getting started with ZoteroUMass Amherst library guide on starting with Zotero.
- UMass Amherst Libraries Zotero workshopsIn the Fall and Spring semesters, UMass Libraries offers one or more workshops on using the citation manager Zotero.
Legal citations
Legal citations enable a reader to easily locate the cases, statutes, regulations or other material cited in legal documents.
Case citations often appear as a number, an abbreviation of the publication in which the document is found followed by another number, e.g. 410 U.S. 113 is the citation to Roe v. Wade. This case can be found in volume 410 at page 113 in the United States Reports. You may further pinpoint a citation by the page number or paragraph number. Note that sometimes a case might have more than one citation ("parallel citation"). If you are pinpointing, be sure that the page number you use corresponds to the particular citation (usually indicated in Westlaw by the number of asterisks).
United States federal law is codified in the United States Code. The Code is arranged as 54 titles of various subject matters of federal jurisdiction (e.g. Title 12: Banks and banking; Title 17: Copyrights; Title 47: Telecommunications). The titles are then split up into chapters, which are further divided into sections (e.g. Title 17: Copyrights -- Chapter 1: Subject matter and scope of copyright -- Section 106: Exclusive rights in copyrighted works). Federal laws might be cited as follows: TITLE U.S.C. § SECTION. For example, 47 U.S.C. § 21 refers to Telecommunications (Title 47), Submarine cables; willful injury to; punishment (section 21).
Citing legal sources
- Introduction to Basic Legal Citation (2016)This free, online guide by Cornell's Legal Information Institute is indexed to both the ALWD guide and the 19th edition of The Bluebook. It also documents the many respects in which contemporary legal writing, very often following guidelines set out in court rules, diverges from the citation formats specified by those academic texts.
- Bluebook GuideFree, online guide to Bluebook citations by Georgetown Law Library.
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