Synthesis: Legal Reading, Reasoning, and WritingWritten by two authors of the Process of Legal Research, this new text, SYNTHESIS, explores how legal reading and reasoning culminate in written and oral legal work-th-office memo, The advice letter and advocacy in trial and appellate courts. This book contains: charts and diagrams to assist people who learn and think visually exercises (on a torts topic) that bring students from passive understanding to active application of skills examples througout the text drawn from an unfoling client situation involiving the unauthorized practice of law and contracts a 'case file' on that client situation with copies and briefs of pertinent authorities and sources, sample writings (two office memos, An advice letter, two motion practice memos, and two appellate briefs), and a transcript of an appellate oral argument incorporation of ethical principles discussion of 'civics' topics, such as federalism and retroactivity, througout the text. (In Legal Writing courses that do not include a motion practice memo or a client letter, professors can omit a single chapter without any loss or coverage on other topics.) Illustrative topics include the structure of legal rules; two means of 'briefing' a statute; reading commentary; stakeholder analysis used to derive underlying policies; organization at the large-, middle-, and small-scale levels; And The 'theory of the case' in advocacy. The Teacher's Manual contains additional exercises, answers to exercises, suggestions about how to use the book effectively, and a sample schedule showing the interaction between the two sister text in an integrated Legal Writing and Research course. Before you choose a text for your next Legal Writing class, treat yourself to a careful examination of this exciting new text, SYNTHESIS: Legal Reading, Reasoning, and Writing. Take advantage of a carefully crafted book, written by respected authors with decades of classroom experience. |
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Page 96
... analysis . C. POLICY ANALYSIS 1. What is Policy Analysis ? Sometimes , your deductive reasoning and reasoning by example may not prove conclusive . The rule may employ vague terms . There may be no decided cases to use , or your ...
... analysis . C. POLICY ANALYSIS 1. What is Policy Analysis ? Sometimes , your deductive reasoning and reasoning by example may not prove conclusive . The rule may employ vague terms . There may be no decided cases to use , or your ...
Page 99
... Have you included all pertinent rules ( their elements and factors ) and all relevant facts ? 99 EXHIBIT 9.4 POLICY ANALYSIS FACTS Social workers answer questions about Meshing Deductive Reasoning, Reasoning by Example, and Policy Analysis.
... Have you included all pertinent rules ( their elements and factors ) and all relevant facts ? 99 EXHIBIT 9.4 POLICY ANALYSIS FACTS Social workers answer questions about Meshing Deductive Reasoning, Reasoning by Example, and Policy Analysis.
Page 100
... POLICY ANALYSIS FACTS Social workers answer questions about living wills for elderly clients RULE Provision of legal advice by nonlawyer is unauthorized practice ; it's legal advice ... Policy Analysis E Review of Chapter 9 4 Policy Analysis.
... POLICY ANALYSIS FACTS Social workers answer questions about living wills for elderly clients RULE Provision of legal advice by nonlawyer is unauthorized practice ; it's legal advice ... Policy Analysis E Review of Chapter 9 4 Policy Analysis.
Contents
The Lawyers Roles and the Legal System | 1 |
Exhibit 1 | 2 |
About This Book | 7 |
Copyright | |
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appellate court application attorney atty brief citations Client Facts client's situation commentary components conclusion Connecticut Supreme Court contract counsel decided decisions deductive reasoning difficult or doubtful discussion doubtful legal questions drafting ElderCare's element enforcement Exhibit fact statement favor federal flowchart fused Home ElderCare if-clause if/then incompetence injunction Introduction involve IRAC issues judge jurisdiction lawyer legal analysis legal consequences legal document legal rules legislature liquor litigation living will statute Minn Minnesota Minnesota Mut Minnesota Supreme Court Minor Premise misdemeanor Nelson office memo oral argument outcome paragraph parties person persuasive precedent phrase plain meaning rule plaintiff policy analysis practice law practice of law present procedural public policy reader reasoning by example REVIEW OF CHAPTER rule of law sample sentence short answers social workers stare decisis Stat statute's statutory Subd Supreme Court tion topic trial court unauthorized practice statute unlicensed valid violation Weatherston's