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am after indepth thorough information on writing policy statments for small biz in the real world

stuff on how to draft up effective
privacy statments
copyright statements

i don't want to copy other peoples stuff,i want to know how its done from scratch in the real world..

any book titles or websites will help

2007-03-05 21:34:32 · 2 answers · asked by g_playa_gent 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

2 answers

Legal writing : form and function
Richmond, Jane N. 2002

Sourcebook on legal writing programs
Brill, Ralph L. 1996

Expert legal writing
LeClercq, Terri 1995

Legal writing style 2d ed.
Weihofen, Henry 1980

And I would suggest a visit to a law library. It would very likely have many volumes on this subject...and maybe even ones more specific to your subject matter.

I might also suggest:

Copyright law : a practitioner's guide
Keller, Bruce P. 2006

Nimmer on copyright : a treatise on the law of literary, musical and artistic property, and the protection of ideas
Nimmer, Melville B. 2006
(This is a huge set of loose-leaf binders which is updated continuously...so it would be for library use only).

2007-03-05 23:31:35 · answer #1 · answered by Wyoming Rider 6 · 0 0

(L)
legal writing: an overview
In many legal settings specialized forms of written communication are required. In many others, writing is the medium in which a lawyer must express their analysis of an issue and seek to persuade others on their clients' behalf. Any legal document must be concise, clear, and conform to the objective standards that have evolved in the legal profession.

There are generally two types of legal writing. The first type requires a balanced analysis of a legal problem or issue. Examples of the first type are inter-office memoranda and letters to clients. To be effective in this form of writing, the lawyer must be sensitive to the needs, level of interest and background of the parties to whom it is addressed. A memorandum to a partner in the same firm that details definitions of basic legal concepts would be inefficient and an annoyance. In contrast, their absence from a letter to a client with no legal background could serve to confuse and complicate a simple situation.

The second type of legal writing is persuasive. Examples of this type are appellate briefs and negotiation letters written on a clients behalf. The lawyer must persuade his or her audience without provoking a hostile response through disrespect or by wasting the recipient's time with unnecessary information. In presenting documents to a court or administrative agency he or she must conform to the required document style.

The drafting of legal documents, such as contracts and wills, is yet another type of legal writing. Guides are available to aid a lawyer in preparing the documents but a unique application of the "form" to the facts of the situation is often required. Poor drafting can lead to unnecessary litigation and otherwise injure the interests of a client.

The legal profession has its own unique system of citation. While it serves to provide the experienced reader with enough information to evaluate and retrieve the cited authorities, it may, at first, seem daunting to the lay reader. Court rules generally specify the citation format required of all memoranda or briefs filed with the court. These rules have not kept up with the changing technology of legal research. Within recent years, online and disk-based law collections have become primary research tools for many lawyers and judges. Because of these changes, there has been growing pressure on those ultimately responsible for citation norms, namely the courts, to establish new rules that no longer presuppose thata publisher's print volume (created over a year after a decision is handed down) is the key reference. (See the reports of the Wisconsin Bar (http://www.law.cornell.edu/papers/wiscite.overview.htm) and the AALL (http://www.aallnet.org/).) Several jurisdictions have responded and many more are sure to follow.

2007-03-05 22:45:31 · answer #2 · answered by Julia R 5 · 0 0

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