User:28USC1344
28USC1344 is a first-year law student in Washington, D.C.
Articles
[edit]Created
[edit]- Jurisdiction stripping
- Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp.
- Palazzolo v. Rhode Island
- Village of Belle Terre v. Boraas
Substantially altered
[edit]- Discovery (law)
- Hickman v. Taylor
- Immigration and Naturalization Service v. Chadha
- Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council
- Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon
- Regulatory taking
- Sandra Day O'Connor
- Work-product doctrine
Patrolled for vandalism
[edit]- Sandra Day O'Connor (this page is particular suceptible to vandalism, for reasons beyond me)
Projects
[edit]General
[edit]I often prefer less to generate my own content and more to improve upon and reorganize other people's content. Specifically, I like organizing articles into a strict and simply hierarchy, and adding as many citations as humanly possible.
Cases
[edit]I would like to spend more time editing case articles on Wikipedia. However, I tend to like to "brief" cases, instead of writing standard encyclopedia articles about them. For my own purposes, I created the "Super-Maxi-Brief" format for cases, which I use both in my studies and for editing Wikipedia case articles. A brief in this format follows the the structure below:
- Parties
- Background
- State of law—Particular statutes or regulations relevant to the case (such as the basis for a claim or defense, or the subject of a constitutionality dispute)
- Facts—The real-world factual background of the dispute
- Procedural history—Everything that the parties did in anticipation of, or during, litigation, except for the very last step (the posture)
- Procedural posture—The object sought by the party appealing or moving
- Legal Analysis
- Issue—The question at hand regarding specific actions of the court
- Arguments/theories—Arguments of all parties and, if relevant, of the lower courts or amicus curiae
- Rule of Law—The rule of law followed, or created and followed, by the court
- Holding—The answer to the issue (usually a minor rewording of the issue)
- Notable concurrences and dissents
- Result
- Judgment/disposition—The order the court
- Legacy and other notes
My article on Hickman v. Taylor is a good example of the Super-Maxi-Brief format.
Membership
[edit]- WikiProject Law
- I am considering started a Wikipedia Society at my law school. However, I think that it might be redundant, as the WikiProject Law may be sufficient.
- I am also considering joining the WikiProject U.S. Supreme Court cases. However, my Super-Maxi-Brief format does not conform at all to the standard proposed by that group.
This user is a participant in WikiProject Law. |