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Introduction to Legal Research for Librarians Mark Podvia September 17, 2010.

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Legal Research for Librarians Mark Podvia September 17, 2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Legal Research for Librarians Mark Podvia September 17, 2010

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4 Sources of Law Legislative Branch: Statutory Law (Legislation) Executive Branch: Administrative Law (Rules and Regulations/Decisions and Orders) Judicial Branch: Case Law (Common Law)

5 Types of Authority Primary Authority: Constitutions, Statutes, Administrative Rules and Regulations, Administrative Decisions and Orders, Case Law, Local Ordinances Secondary Authority: Treatises, Law Reviews, American Law Reports, Encyclopedias, Restatements

6 Case Law

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8 Federal Reporters US Supreme Court: United States Reports, United States Supreme Court Reports Lawyers’ Edition, Supreme Court Reporter US Courts of Appeals: Federal Reporter US District Courts: Federal Supplement

9 Federal Case Citation Clinton v. New York, 524 U.S. 417 (1998).

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13 Regions Atlantic North Eastern North Western South Eastern South Western Southern Pacific California Reporter New York Supplement

14 Pennsylvania Case Citation Comm. v. Gosselin, 861 A.2d 996 (Pa. Super. 2004). Comm. v. Gosselin, 2004 PA Super 426.

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18 Where do we find Cases? Printed Reporters Commercial Sources (Lexis, Westlaw) Internet Sources

19 Legislation

20 Legislative Process A Law begins its life as a bill, a legislative proposal offered for debate before its enactment. Bills can be introduced in either chamber. After it is introduced, a bill is sent to committee where hearings are held. If a bill is reported favorably it goes to the floor for a vote. If passed it is sent to the other chamber where the process starts over.

21 If the bill is passed by both houses, it may need to go to a conference committee to work out differences between the two versions. The bill goes to the President/Governor for signature. If the bill is vetoed the legislature may be able to override the veto by a ¾ vote.

22 Where are Statutes published? Slip Laws—Individual law printed after passage of a law. Session Laws—Laws adopted during a specified session arranged in chronological order. Codified Laws—Laws compiled into an order code arranged by topic.

23 Federal Session Laws United States Statutes at Large—official United States Code, Congressional and Administrative News--unofficial

24 Codified Federal Statutes United States Code (USC)—official United States Code Annotated (USCA)— unofficial (West) United States Code Service (USCS)— unofficial (Lexis)

25 Pennsylvania Session Laws Laws of Pennsylvania

26 Codified Pennsylvania Statutes Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes—Pa. Cons. Stat.—official Purdon’s Pennsylvania Statutes Annotated—P.S.—unofficial Purdon’s Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes Annotated—Pa.C.S.A.—unofficial

27 Administrative Law

28 Federal Administrative Register Federal Register: Issued each business day Includes proposed rules, final rules, notices, Presidential proclamations,

29 Federal Administrative Compilation Code of Federal Regulations

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32 Pennsylvania Administrative Register Pennsylvania Bulletin: Issued weekly Includes proposed rules, final rules, notices, local rules of court

33 Pennsylvania Administrative Compilation Pennsylvania Code


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