How do you Bluebook cite a law review article?

How do you Bluebook cite a law review article?

Law Reviews & Other Periodicals

  1. Author’s full name as it appears on the article.
  2. Title of the article (underlined or italicized)
  3. Volume number.
  4. Journal title abbreviation (see Table 13)
  5. First page of the article.
  6. Date of publication.

How do you cite a case in a law review article?

U.S. Supreme Court: Official Citation

  1. Name of the case (italicized or underlined – assuming you are writing a brief or memo);
  2. Volume of the United States Reports;
  3. Reporter abbreviation (“U.S.”);
  4. First page where the case can be found in the reporter and pinpoint page if required;

How do you Bluebook cite an online article?

A citation to an internet web page generally contains the following information: (1) the author, (2) the title of the web page, (3) the title of the website, (4) the date and time, and (5) the URL.

How do you Bluebook cite a news article?

The citation should have: Full author(s) name, Title of the Article, Newspaper title in small caps(abbreviated according to T. 10 and T. 13), Full Date (and time, if there is one), followed by the url.

How do you state an issue?

How to write a problem statement

  1. Describe how things should work.
  2. Explain the problem and state why it matters.
  3. Explain your problem’s financial costs.
  4. Back up your claims.
  5. Propose a solution.
  6. Explain the benefits of your proposed solution(s).
  7. Conclude by summarizing the problem and solution.

How do I evaluate an argument?

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  1. Identify the conclusion and the premises.
  2. Put the argument in standard form.
  3. Decide if the argument is deductive or non-deductive.
  4. Determine whether the argument succeeds logically.
  5. If the argument succeeds logically, assess whether the premises are true.

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