Senior Fellow, Stein Center for Law & Ethics
gconk@law.fordham.edu
Office: 8-108
| 9/2/2025 | Tue | LAW: Last Day to Register for Fall 2025 (Add/Drop ends at 11:59pm) |
| 9/5/2025 | Fri | LAW: Last day to submit Independent Study & Upper-Class Writing Requirement Forms |
| 10/1/2025 | Wed | LAW: No Classes (Yom Kippur) |
| 10/2/2025 | Thu | LAW: No Classes (Yom Kippur) |
| 10/13/2025 | Mon | LAW: Columbus Day (Observed) - University Closed |
| 10/14/2025 | Tue | LAW: Monday Class Schedule
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Accountability:
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Writing Requirement paper (25 pp.)
There is no anonymous grading in this seminar class
SCHEDULE
The student must present a topic proposal for faculty approval, submit an outline and rough draft for faculty comment, and submit a final paper that (1) demonstrates significant research and original analysis; and (2) is well organized, carefully presented, and clearly written.
Your objective is to produce a piece of legal writing at a level demonstrating professional competence.
The basic structure is to pose a question, survey the literature identifying and stating accurately any contending views on the question, evaluating their strengths, and explaining and justifying your proposed resolution.
As in all professional writing the strong preference is for reliance on primary sources to establish any fact. Facts asserted that are undisputed common knowledge need not be footnoted. [The Constitution and first twelve amendments were ratified in 1788. The first Congress met in 1789.] The fact of what a court has or may do is primarily established by citation to judicial decisions; Laws by citation of Rules, statutes or Constitutional provisions; Regulations by citation of the Rule, etc. Writing requirement and term papers are not a survey of secondary sources, but rather use such sources to identify the reasoning by which the question posed may be answered.
What is plagiarism: the knowing or unrecognized recitation of facts established by another without attribution to the source.
Light editing Philosophy. Similarly to the Virginia Law Review's Slatebook on style:
I aim to maintain the author’s voice in every piece a student submits. I may suggest both discretionary and non-discretionary changes. Non-discretionary changes are those that must be made, and include things like spelling, grammar, substantiation, and formatting which may be Bluebook OR in compliance with any recognized legal style manual - such as the New Jersey Courts' manual of style for judicial opinions formats or the ALWD Citation Manual. Discretionary suggestions include the style, clarity, and structure of the piece. I will respect the author’s judgment regarding whether those changes should be made.
Remember that the purpose of citation is to show 1) the source of facts asserted and 2) the source of the argument presented so that your own contribution can be recognized by identifying ideas which came from others.
SUGGESTIONS RE WRITING STYLE
Proofreaders' marks Chicago Manual of StyleThe Elements of Style - by William Strunk & E.B. WhiteN.B. - Ch. II Elementary Principles of Composition
DOJ Journal of Federal Law & Practice No. 2 (2019) - APPEALS
Rhetoric: Aristotle, RBG and the Art of Persuasion - GWC blogpost Otherwise
Remarks of Judge Aldisert on accepting the Golden Pen award.
* Prof. Nancy Leong: how to write a law school paper or law review article VIDEO
