Law
Citing Legal Materials/Legal Style Manuals
Lawyers and scholars of the law have developed their own methods of citing legal materials in such documents as court briefs and law journals. Some other general style manuals have also developed specific rules for citing legal materials.
- The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation, compiled by the editors of the Columbia Law Review, the Harvard Law Review, the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, and the Yale Law Journal.
- The style most commonly used by lawyers and legal scholars. Available at
Government Documents Service Desk in Willis Library.
- Available at Government Documents Service Desk, Call Number KF245 B58.
- Introduction to Basic Legal Citation, by Peter Martin of Cornell Law School, is an online beginner's guide to legal citation based on The Bluebook.
- Texas Rules of Form, by the editors of the Texas Law Review.
- Popularly known as the Greenbook, this supplement to The
Bluebook addresses citation problems unique to Texas; in cases of
conflict, Texas Rules of Form should be followed in citing Texas
authorities.
- Available at the Government Documents Service Desk under Call Number TxD Z UA345.5 T312RUF 2003.
- The latest edition is available for purchase from the Texas Law Review.
- Manual on Usage & Style, by the editors of the Texas Law Review.
- Affectionately known as the MoUS, this diminutive guide to
style and usage for legal writing contains rules on such topics as punctuation,
capitalization, numbers and symbols, italicization, grammar, word choice,
spelling, quotations, composition, and editing.
- Available at the Government Documents Service Desk under Call Number TxD Z UA345.5 M319 1995.
- The latest (10th) edition is not currently available at the UNT Libraries, but is available for purchase from the Texas Law Review.
- ALWD Citation Manual: A Professional System of Citation, by the Association of Legal Writing Directors.
- This refinement of The Bluebook is more consistent and logical,
and includes many more examples. Because it is designed to be a teaching tool
and not just a reference work, The ALWD Citation Manual has fuller
and clearer explanations, with sidebars that offer advice or call attention to
common errors.
- Available at the Government Documents Service Desk under Call Number KF245.A45 2003.
- The ALWD Web site has information about the manual, including an FAQ, a list of schools and publishers that have adopted it, and instructional materials for teachers.
- Universal Citation Guide, by the American Association of Law Libraries.
- Bluebook-style citations currently require the author to refer
to page numbers from the paper publications of a specific vendor, such as West.
This system complicates matters when the author wishes to cite the same document
(or the reader wishes to consult the same document) as it appears in a different
format (e.g., online) or as it has been issued by a different vendor (e.g.,
LexisNexis). This guide sets out a blueprint for courts that wish to design
citation schemes for their own decisions that are not keyed to print format or
to any specific publisher’s products, and also includes universal citation
formats for statutes and administrative rules.
- Available at the Government Documents Service Desk under Call Number KF245.U54 2004.
- Version 2.1 of the Universal Citation Guide is available online at the AALL Web site. It integrates the first edition of the Universal Citation Guide, which included rules for citing judicial decisions, constitutions, statutes, and administrative regulations, with rules for citing law reviews and court rules, drafts of which were published for comment in Law Library Journal in 2000.
- The University of Chicago Manual of Legal Citation, edited by the University of Chicago Law Review and the University of Chicago Legal Forum.
- Popularly referred to as the Maroonbook, this is
an attempt to simplify the often obsessively detailed and often arcane
rules of The Bluebook. It sets forth very general guidelines and
encourages writers to use common sense in applying them to specific
situations. The Maroonbook has been around since 1989, but has never quite caught on with lawyers or scholars. Although the Chicago Manual and Turabian list it as a suitable alternative to The Bluebook, virtually no
one actually uses it who is not affiliated with the University of Chicago or writing for one of the journals mentioned above.
- The Maroonbook is not currently available at the UNT Libraries.
- The University of Chicago Law Review Style Sheet includes a restatement of the Maroonbook and highlights some important rules of form from the Chicago Manual of Style.
- Citing Legal Materials in APA Style (Westfield State College – Ely Library)
- Samples of reference list entries and text citations in APA format for major types of legal materials.
- Citing References from LexisNexis® Academic (LexisNexis)
- Sample MLA, APA, and Bluebook citations are provided for selected document types found in LexisNexis® Academic.
- How to cite electronic, print and microfiche congressional publications (LexisNexis® Congressional)
- Basic guidelines and sample citations for sources in the LexisNexis Congressional database. It is not clear what style is being used for the examples, and for any source or format other than LexisNexis Congressional (including other online and electronic formats), the user is merely referred to The Complete Guide to Citing Government Information Resources.