Bluebook Citation Legal Treatise

(2) Massachusetts Continuing Legal Education (MCLE) (another treatise) Some frequently cited national works have their own special citation form. […] Whatever you think of the latest Bluebook, keep in mind that the citation tools offered by Lexis and Westlaw don`t necessarily generate Bluebook-compliant citations, at least in terms of treaties. […] (1) Massachusetts Practice (a multi-part treaty on Massachusetts law) … Occasional remarks on the appointment of judicial authorities by lawyers and judges. « How to quote treaties … In large multi-volume processes, you often need to specify the volume you are using. Paste the volume number at the beginning of the citation or a section after the title. 2 Charles Kindregan et al., Family Law and Practice: With Forms (2002). (2) Include all editors or translators in parentheses [rule 15.2], followed by ed. or translation. – Follow the usual rules for one, two or more authors. 26 Herbert Lemelman, Uniform Commercial Code Forms Annotated (2005).

Karl Marx & Frederich Engels, The Communist Manifesto (Joseph Katz ed., Samuel Moore trans., Washington Square Press 1964) (1848). Roy M. Mersky & Donald J. Dunn, Fundamentals of Legal Research 120 (8th ed. 2002). Lynn M. LoPucki et al., Commercial Transactions: A Systems Approach (2nd ed., 2003). The Lockerbie agreement « Extradition by analogy »: « exceptional measure » or model for transnational criminal justice? (2) If there are multiple editions of different publishers, insert the editor with the edition and year.

[…] Based on Scoop.it of: citeblog.access-to-law.com […] 6 Austin W. Scott, The Law of Trusts (4th ed. 1990). Dana Kosher, Collection of Civil Judgments (5th ed. 2013). John O. Mirick, Discovery and Trial Preparation, in chapter 93A Rights and Remedies (Hon. Margot Botsford ed., 2005). This follows the same pattern as Massachusetts Practice. Enter (1) the volume number, (2) the author(s) of the respective volume, (3) the title of the respective volume, (4) quote exactly if necessary, and (5) edition/year (and if necessary additional). Do not enter Massachusetts Practice as a title. Secondary sources commonly used in Massachusetts – Rule 15.3(1) Cite the full name of the author as specified in the publication, including middle initials or other designations such as Jr.

or III. [Rule 15.1], but not « Dr. » or « Prof. » Use an ampersand with both full names for two authors [Rule 15.1(a)]. If there are more than two authors, you can either cite them all or cite the first, followed by et al. [Rule 15.1(b)]. (1) Cite the output you quote/rely on, usually the most recent. Do not specify an initial edition, but only subsequent editions. Note that they are 2D, 3D, 4th, 5th, etc. Always be careful not to raise.