How do you cite a Lexis case?
All LEXIS Cites consist of the year of the decision in the same position as the volume number on a standard reporter citation, an abbreviation of the court, agency, or document type, and a sequential document number. The last number in a standard LEXIS Cite is a document number, not a page number.
Table of Contents
How do you cite a Lexis case?
All LEXIS Cites consist of the year of the decision in the same position as the volume number on a standard reporter citation, an abbreviation of the court, agency, or document type, and a sequential document number. The last number in a standard LEXIS Cite is a document number, not a page number.
How do you cite a Supreme Court case in APA?
Here are the three basic elements for an APA Style reference for most court decisions:
- Name of the case: Name v. Name.
- Source reporting the decision: Volume Source Page.
- Court and date of the decision: (Court Date)
What cases are published in the Federal Supplement?
The Federal Supplement is a case law reporter published by West Publishing in the United States that includes select opinions of the United States district courts, and is part of the National Reporter System.
What is an issue brief?
An Issue Brief provides a summary of the best available evidence on a public health problem with policy implications. An issue brief is most appropriate when no policy solutions are known to exist and the issue is still in the problem identification domain of the policy process.
How do you cite proposed regulations?
Elements for Proposed Rules, Notices, or Comments
- Give the name of the rule/regulation only if commonly cited that way.
- Volume of Federal Register.
- Federal Register abbreviation.
- page number (if pinpoint citing give the page the rule/notice/comment begins on and the pinpoint page)
- Date (full date should be used)
How do you cite government regulations?
Here are the basic elements of an APA Style reference for a regulation drawn from the Code of Federal Regulations.
- Name of the regulation. Start the reference with the name of the regulation if the regulation is commonly identified by its name.
- Title number.
- Abbreviated name of the source.
- Section number.
- Date.