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News and events

Our next Online Legal Research course will be in Sydney on 28 August 2009 for the New South Wales State Legal Conference. Don't forget to book early as these sessions always fill fast. Contact us or the New South Wales State Legal Conference for more details and a copy of our brochure.  

Testimonials

"No matter how well you write, their professionalism, originality of thought and presentation ... will improve your writing"

Client, USA.

 

Modules Print

Choose from our standard modules or ask us to tailor a module to your needs.

Module 1: Online legal content

In this module, participants learn:

  • where to find legal information on the Internet (legislation, case law, secondary sources, and foreign legal materials)
  • the differences between free content and subscription-based content and the strengths and weaknesses of each
  • the differences between authoritative and non-authoritative online legal information
  • how to evaluate online legal information

Module 2: Online research methods

In this module, participants learn:

  • methods for researching online legal information
  • the differences between online methodologies and traditional research methodologies
  • how to update legislation, note-up cases, find commentary on a specific topic, and research comparative foreign law

Module 3: Online research techniques

In this module, participants learn:

  • Internet search techniques needed to find relevant information
  • ‘operators’, different database types, and catalogues
  • indexing, file types, and site construction
  • search engine design and operation
  • Module 4: Legal research methodology

    In this module, participants learn an innovative 10-step methodology for solving legal problems. Briefly, the 10 steps involve:

  • Fact collection
  • Fact analysis
  • Identification of legal questions
  • Search term development
  • Methodical legal research
  • Issue decomposition
  • Application
  • Resolution
  • Presentation
  • Review

By the end of the module, participants will:

  • know how to approach legal problems in an organized, not ad hoc way
  • be more confident that you can identify all the relevant facts and issues
  • be less likely to overlook a winning argument
  • work more efficiently

Module 5: Persuasive argumentation

This module explains the three ways to persuade judges: logic, emotion, and credibility. The trainer then applies these persuasion tools to 3 specific tasks:

  • how to cue the judge to want to find in your client's favour (for example, by using a ‘storytelling’ structure)
  • how to show the judge that the law permits, even requires, the outcome you urge (for example, by using
    ‘cable-like’ arguments rather than ‘chain-like’ arguments)
  • how to communicate your proposed solution in the most persuasive way (for example, by choosing the right words)
 
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