



Example: Nuno Garoupa & Chris William Sanchirico, Decoupling as Transactions Tax, 39 J. Most law journals are what the Bluebook calls "consecutively paginated journals." Hence, you will follow R16.4 to create a full citation to an article in such a journal. Any user seeing a need for clarification, correction, or other improvement is encouraged to “speak up.” What doesn't work, isn't clear, is missing, appears to be in error? Has a change occurred in one of the fifty states that should be reported? Comments of these and other kinds can be sent by email addressed to (Please include "Citation" in the subject line.) Many of the features and some of the coverage of this reference are the direct result of past user questions and advice.įirst, let's assume that you are citing a law journal article. Since the guide is online, its further revision is not tied to a rigid publication cycle. (Over 50,000 copies of the 2015 edition were downloaded.) To access any of them, select “eBooks” at the top of the page. You'll want one, like Adobe's, which does.) 2) a version designed specifically for use on the full range of Kindles as well as other ereaders or apps using the Mobi format and 3) a version in ePub format for ereaders or apps that work with it. The content of this guide is also available in three e-book formats: 1) a PDF version that can be printed out in whole or part and also used with hyperlink navigation on an iPad or other tablet, indeed, on any computer (Be aware that not all PDF readers allow the user to follow links. The current online format, released in early 2016, was created with the assistance of a team of students enrolled in a graduate software engineering course at Cornell. Importantly, however, it documents the many respects in which contemporary legal writing, very often following guidelines set out in court rules or style guides, diverges from the citation formats specified by those academic texts.
