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Bluebook 101: Introductory Signals

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something referred to in the text ... SEUSS, THE CAT IN THE HAT (1957) ... Otherwise, read the lists in R. 1.4. This rule is long, but it only comes up with ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bluebook 101: Introductory Signals


1
Bluebook 101 Introductory Signals
  • R. 1
  • (for briefs and memoranda, see R. B4)

2
If signals baffle you, you arent alone.
  • The rules on signals are a virtually
    cryptographic code.1
  • 1. FREDERICK WIENER, BRIEFING AND ARGUING FEDERAL
    APPEALS 223 (1961)

3
  • The rules on signals more than all the others
    combined, have contributed to the Blue Books
    notoriety.2 They are back in all their glorious
    inscrutability.3
  • 2. Peter Lushing, Book Review, 67 COLUM. L. REV.
    599, 601 (1967) (reviewing A UNIFORM SYSTEM OF
    CITATION (1967)).
  • 3. Id.

4
What is an introductory signal?
  • Its a concise way of alerting the reader to what
    you think youre doing with the citation that
    follows.
  • For instance,
  • E.g. is a quick way to say Im citing one or
    two sources but there are a bunch I could cite.
  • Contra is a quick way to say I know that this
    source is on the other side of what I just said.

5
No signal
  • No signal at all means what Im citing clearly
    supports or identifies what I just said.
  • Use no signal when citing
  • something that directly supports the text
  • the source of a quotation
  • something referred to in the text

6
E.g.,
  • E.g. (L. exempli gratia) means for example.
  • What youre citing supports what you said, but
    there are other authorities too.
  • Can be combined with other signals (But see,
    e.g., )
  • Note the comma after E.g. is not italicized.

7
Example
  • Washington law restricts teenagers from many
    activities.4
  • 4. E.g., WASH. REV. CODE 26.04.010(1) (2006)
    (limiting marriage to people 18 and older) WASH.
    REV. CODE 70.155.080 (2006) (limiting purchase
    of tobacco).

8
Accord
  • Accord means I just cited something that
    supports my proposition, and now heres another
    thing that supports it too.
  • You can also use Accord when you want to cite
    another jurisdiction.

9
Example
  • Many people perceive that rich people dont
    pay their share of taxes. As Peter De Vries
    quipped, The Rich arent like us -- they pay
    less taxes.5
  • 5. Mark Shields, Editorial, Anger About
    Privilege, WASH. POST, July 30, 1989 (quoting De
    Vries). Accord id. (quoting Leona Helmsley Only
    the little people pay taxes.)

10
See
  • See means youre citing something that clearly
    supports what you just said.
  • Its just a hair less direct than No signal.

11
Example
  • The Human Rights Committee was created by the
    Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.6
  • 6. See THOMAS BUERGENTHAL, DINAH SHELTON DAVID
    P. STEWART, INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS IN A
    NUTSHELL 49 (3d ed. 2002).

12
Signals as verbs Example
  • See WILLIAM L. DWYER, IPSE DIXIT HOW THE WORLD
    LOOKS TO A FEDERAL JUDGE (2007).
  • For an insightful and charming collection of
    speeches by a UW alumnus, see WILLIAM L. DWYER,
    IPSE DIXIT HOW THE WORLD LOOKS TO A FEDERAL
    JUDGE (2007).

13
See also
  • Use see also when you have already cited
    something that directly supports you and you want
    to add more.
  • A parenthetical explaining the sources relevance
    is encouraged.

14
Example
  • If children let others into their home while
    their parents are gone, crazy things can happen.7
  • 7. See DR. SEUSS, THE CAT IN THE HAT (1957). See
    also RISKY BUSINESS (Geffen Film Co. 1983)
    (teenager bringing others into home while parents
    away).

15
Cf.
  • Cf. is the abbreviation for confer, Latin for
    compare.
  • Use when cited authority doesnt exactly support
    what you just said, but its close enough to lend
    support.
  • An explanatory parenthetical is strongly
    recommended.

16
Example
  • The wolf eats people.8
  • 8. See JACOB GRIMM WILHELM GRIMM, Little Red
    Riding Hood, in GRIMMS FAIRY TALES 100 (1812).
    Cf. THE THREE LITTLE PIGS (United Artists 1933)
    (blowing down houses, presumably with intent to
    eat pigs).

17
Compare with
  • This signal is what it sounds like -- youre
    comparing one case (or article or statute) with
    another.
  • To help the reader figure out why youre
    comparing this and that, include parentheticals.

18
Negative Signals
19
See generally
  • Use for background material.
  • Parentheticals are encouraged.

20
Order of Signals
  • Multiple signals in one footnote no signal,
    e.g., accord, see, see also, cf., compare with,
    contra, but see, but cf., see generally.
  • Start with the strongest, most direct support,
    then negative, then general.

21
Order within each signal
  • If one authority is considerably more helpful or
    authoritative, lead with it.
  • Otherwise, read the lists in R. 1.4.
  • This rule is long, but it only comes up with
    string cites. Its just a way to bring order to
    long, messy footnotes.
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