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A Practical Guide to Appellate Advocacy

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The original process-based text for teaching students how to write a brief, A Practical Guide to Appellate Advocacy illuminates each step with clear, specific guidance and annotated examples of both good and bad writing that illustrate how it’s done.

 

A Practical Guide to Appellate Advocacy is the original process-based persuasive writing text. With her trademark specificity and clarity, author Mary Beth Beazley explains each step in the process of writing a legal brief, using annotated good and bad examples that illustrate how it’s done. Recognizing the needs of neophyte legal writers, the text offers formulas such as CREAC that students can use to write sound arguments, effective case descriptions, and thesis sentences. In addition, Chapter 4, “Facing the Blank Page”, offers solutions for addressing procrastination; Chapter 14 provides thorough coverage to prepare students for Moot Court Competitions, with helpful advice for communicating productively with teachers, mentors, and moot court coaches. Now a Connected eBook, A Practical Guide to Appellate Advocacy offers a host of supportive resources and materials on CasebookConnect, such as sample briefs and motions, guidance on brief writing style and citation, and reference material for court rules and related sources.

New to the Sixth

Updated to reflect changes in law school and practice in response to the COVID pandemic, with detailed guidance on how to participate in online oral arguments Streamlined to ensure that the text remains succinct and timely through successive editions Recall and Review self-assessment questions at the end of each chapter Professors and students will benefit

Annotated examples of both good and bad legal writing End-of-chapter summaries and Recall and Review questions Balanced coverage of legal reasoning, rhetoric, and skills Generous fund of resources on CC, including additional sample documents, exercises, and other pedagogical materials Four-part process for writing a 1) prewriting (research, analysis, outline); 2) writing (first draft); 3) revising (second draft); 4) polishing (final draft) Uses humor and interesting examples to engage and teach, for example… Uses “phrase-that-pays” instead of “key terms” to remind students to focus on the specific language in controversy when they analyze legal rules Uses "Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon" to explain how to make connections between the various points in their arguments.

Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2002

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
110 reviews15 followers
April 20, 2021
Honestly this book was my crutch and for that reason I will give it 4 stars. The author tries to add some fun on a topic that’s obviously so dry, but cheers to that anyways.
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636 reviews100 followers
December 24, 2016
There was a lot of overlap between this textbook and Beazley's other Writing textbook, but overall it was fine. The samples were the best part.
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990 reviews
April 26, 2011
Clear and engaging. Wish I'd had it first semester!
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