1 / 12

The Legal Profession and Professionalism: Legal Writing and Analysis

The Legal Profession and Professionalism: Legal Writing and Analysis. Margaret Hall ( hall@law.ubc.ca ) Michael Begg ( mjb@artseen.ca ) Pooja Parmar (poojaparmar7@gmail.com). Forms of legal writing. The memorandum The opinion letter The factum

Télécharger la présentation

The Legal Profession and Professionalism: Legal Writing and Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Legal Profession and Professionalism: Legal Writing and Analysis Margaret Hall (hall@law.ubc.ca) Michael Begg (mjb@artseen.ca) Pooja Parmar (poojaparmar7@gmail.com)

  2. Forms of legal writing • The memorandum • The opinion letter • The factum A certain degree of formality is required in all legal writing: avoid slang, contractions, and “folksiness” in your writing

  3. Structure of a Legal Memorandum (“IRAC”) • Facts • Issues (questions) • Brief Answer (answer questions) • Statement of relevant law(s)/rule(s) • Application of law to facts/Discussion • Conclusion • A flexible formula, not an “ironclad mold” in which to fit your analysis

  4. Facts and Issues • Facts • Include facts relevant to the legal issues and rules • State assumptions you are making • Describe any relevant gaps in information • Issues • If the issues are complex, break into sub-issues • Stating issue as a question is effective

  5. Brief Answer and Law/Rule • Brief answer • Concise • Answer question posed as issue • Law/rule • Concise • Cite to authority

  6. Application of the law to the facts • Address issues in order • Use headings for clarity of structure • Quote effectively • Consider arguments and their relative strength • Consider analogies if no law on point

  7. Application: Discussing case law • avoid spilling out an “undigested mass of case law” in your discussion. • How much detail do you give for each authority cited? • sufficient details to make it meaningful to your reader • why are you citing a particular authority? Is it a case with similar facts? Is it a binding authority? Does it contain a persuasive judgement? Do you want to distinguish this case from yours? Tell your reader!

  8. Conclusion • Use mini-conclusions for each issue in your application • The conclusion should then summarize those mini-conclusions and tie them together • Include the gray areas; avoid misleading your reader • It should not include new materials or arguments, but can include recommendations and possible courses of action

  9. Opinion Letters • The audience will vary much more than with a legal memorandum • Summarise complex legal principles and put them into language your reader will understand • State the purpose of the letter and give concrete advice

  10. The Factum • Main focus to persuade (in contrast to the memo and opinion letter, the purpose of which is to provide objective information) • Strict rules govern both the format of factums

  11. Post-Writing Tips • Check for coherence and unity • Editing • Grammar: e.g. subject-verb, run-on sentences, dangling modifiers • Plain English (active voice) • Gender neutral language • Precision and conciseness • Paragraphs, sentences, words • Proofreading • typos, spelling mistakes

  12. Revise, Revise, Revise • Take a break • Have you answered the questions? • Revise some more • Hand it in!

More Related