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Guide to U.S. Legal Analysis and Communication, Third Edition

Authors
  • Deborah B. McGregor
  • Cynthia M. Adams
  • Katrina J. Lee
Series / Aspen Coursebook Series
Teaching Materials
NO
Description
Table of contents
Preface

Buy a new version of this textbook and receive access to the Connected eBook on Casebook Connect, including lifetime access to the online ebook with highlight, annotation, and search capabilities. Access also includes an outline tool and other helpful resources. Connected eBooks provide what you need most to be successful in your law school classes.

Designed primarily for the international lawyer and international law student, this one-of-a-kind text introduces readers to legal analysis and communications used in the U.S.

With customized exercises, examples, and illustrations, the authors, who together have more than seven decades of experience teaching legal writing, provide detailed instruction on the types of legal writing that international lawyers are most likely to engage in with U.S. lawyers. Organized for optimizing skills-building, the text begins with a contextual overview of the court system and the civil litigation process in the U.S., and then moves to structuring and communicating an objective analysis, briefing a case, and doing statutory analysis. The text delivers practical guidance on writing client letters, demand letters, office memos, and electronic correspondence. The authors emphasize structure, planning, and ethics in educating about the legal writing process.

 

 

New to the Third Edition:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • New co-author Katrina Lee, Clinical Professor of Law, Director of LL.M. Legal Writing, Director of Program on Dispute Resolution, The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law; and former President of the Association of Legal Writing Directors
  • Reorganized and streamlined chapters for a stronger and more concise presentation
  • Expanded coverage of legal writing skills related to how to structure and formulate an objective legal analysis; how to write a formal office memo, client letters, and demand letters; and how to write professional emails and e-memos
  • New mini TOCs at the start of each chapter that provide a handy “roadmap” of topics covered
  • Updated material throughout

 

 

Professors and students will benefit from:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • Detailed and summary table of contents, plus chapter roadmaps
  • Glossary of terms for international readers
  • Overviews of the U.S. government and court system, the common law system, and the civil litigation process
  • Clear exposition supported by numerous exercises that cover the types of legal writing international lawyers are most likely to use
  • Emphasis on an ethical, thorough, and structured writing process

 

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About the authors
Deborah B. McGregor
Clinical Professor of Law Emerita
Indiana University Maurer School of Law

Following graduation from the Georgetown University Law Center, bClinical Professor of Law Emerita Deborah B. McGregorb engaged in private practice in Boulder, Colorado, where she focused primarily in probate law and estate planning. Thereafter, she taught legal writing for three years at the Indiana University Maurer School of Law before joining the IU faculty in Indianapolis. As Assistant Director of the Legal Writing Program at IU, she developed the academic support program, the first writing course for LL.M. students, and a summer legal process course for J.D. and M.J. students. In 2013, Prof. McGregor became director of the law school’s new Master of Jurisprudence Program, designed for students whose career focus was not law, but who would benefit from learning about the law. The first class matriculated in the summer of 2014. Prof. McGregor has been an active participant in the national Legal Writing Institute (LWI), presenting at both national and regional conferences over the last 27 years.& Prof. McGregor collaborated on a week-long teaching workshop through the Rule of Law Initiative for Ukrainian law professors. She taught Legal Writing and Analysis in Hangzhou and Shanghai, China, and Introduction to the American Legal System in Alexandria, Egypt. Prof. McGregor is the only legal writing professor to receive the student bar association's Best New Teacher’s Award. She has also received the Black Law Student Association’s John Morton-FinneyBrenda Elise Bowles Award twice, the Teaching Excellence Recognition Award twice, and the Indiana University Trustee’s Teaching Award.

Cynthia M. Adams
Indiana University - Indianapolis

Cynthia M. Adams is Clinical Professor of Law and Co-Director of the Latin American Law Program at Indiana University School of Law-Indianapolis, where she has taught advanced contract drafting; contract drafting for international law students, legal analysis and communication for both J.D. and international law students; contracts for international law students; civil procedure; trusts and estates; and legal process. Adams is an active member of the Indiana Bar Association and the Indianapolis Bar Association. She serves as the Chair-Elect for the American Association of Law Schools (AALS) Section on Graduate Programs for Foreign Lawyers and serves on the Executive Committee of the AALS Section on International Exchange Programs. Adams founded and manages a listserv devoted to teaching international law students and lawyers. She is a member of the Legal Writing Institute (a U.S. organization devoted to teaching excellence in legal writing) and serves as the Chairperson of the Legal Writing Institutersquo;s Committee on Global Legal Writing Skills, which supports and promotes cross-border teaching of law students. Adams was one of the first faculty members to receive Indiana University#39;s Trustee#39;s Teaching Award in recognition of teaching excellence and is a three-time recipient of the law schoolrsquo;s Teaching Excellence Recognition Award. Adams has made many presentations at regional, national, and international conferences. Previously, Adams practiced law with an Indianapolis law firm, focusing on general business, acquisitions and mergers, commercial loans, and trusts and estates. She also served as an adjunct professor of English at Indiana UniversityPurdue University-Indianapolis and as an adjunct professor of English at Butler University.

Katrina Lee
Professor
The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law

Katrina Lee is the John C. ElamVorys Sater Professor in Law, an endowed position at The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law. Before joining the faculty at Moritz in 2011, she enjoyed an accomplished career in complex litigation spanning more than 12 years and was elevated to equity partner at her law firm. Professor Lee is a former President of the Association of Legal Writing Directors (2020-2021). She teaches LL.M. Legal Writing, Business of Law, Legal Analysis and Writing, and Legal Negotiation. Professor Lee serves as the Director of Moritz’s Program on Dispute Resolution and a Faculty Advisor for The Ohio State Journal on Dispute Resolution. She also serves as the Director of Moritz’s LL.M. Legal Writing program. Professor Lee triple-majored at the University of California at Berkeley and received her J.D. degree from the University of California at Berkeley. She is a member of the California State Bar.

Product Information
Edition
Third Edition
Publication date
2022-01-31
Copyright Year
2022
Pages
522
Connected eBook + Paperback
9781543807790
Connected eBook (Digital Only)
9781543857290
Subject
Legal Writing
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