Law Library Exam Resources in a Time of Pandemic

Although the exam period is different this year than in the past, remember that the Law Library still has exam study resources to help!

Sample & Practice Exams

Currently a few sample and practice exams by UC Law professors are available on the Law School Sample / Practice Exams TWEN site. If you have trouble accessing this page, please send me an email. Sometimes you can also find old exams on other websites. Check out our Exam Study Guide — Practice & Sample Exams page for more information.

Subject Specific Study Aids for Upcoming Exams

You can view all of our study aids, as well as other resources for studying for exams on the Exam Study Guide.

Celebrate National Library Workers Day!

Established by the American Library Association’s Allied Professional Association’s (ALA-APA), National Library Worker’s Day was designed as an opportunity to recognize all library workers, including librarians, support staff and others who make library service possible every day.

Do you know any library workers who should be recognized for the great work they do, their positive outlook, or the wonderful way they assist people? Submit their names to the ALA-APA Galaxy of Stars as part of National Library Workers Day celebration! It’s not too late to let someone know that you appreciate them and the work they do!

The National Library Workers Day webpage encourages friends, patrons, employers and co-workers to “Submit a Star” by providing a brief testimonial about a favorite library employee. Each testimonial (listing first names, library type and city/state location only) will be posted on the NLWD’s Galaxy of Stars page.

Nominate as many library workers as you like!

This Week in the Law Library: Find the Library at Your Place!

This week, the Robert S. Marx Law Library invites all College of Law community members to find the library at their place by visiting the Law Library’s website to access virtual services and resources. While the library’s physical spaces may be temporarily closed due to COVID-19, you can discover ebooks, legal databases, study aids, research guides, videos, and much more—all from home!

In times of crisis, libraries respond to their community’s needs in innovative and inspiring ways. Throughout the coronavirus pandemic, libraries of all types are continuing to make a difference in people’s lives by providing electronic learning resources, including research help, research instruction, legal databases, and remote teaching and learning help, as well as information about keeping your family well and safe.

April 19-25, 2020 is National Library Week, a time to highlight the valuable role libraries, librarians and library workers play in transforming lives and strengthening communities. This National Library Week, the public can show their appreciation and support for libraries by visiting their library’s website, following them on social media and using the hashtag #NationalLibraryWeek.

The original theme for National Library Week, “Find your place at the library,” was chosen months ago before the emergence of a global pandemic would force libraries to close their buildings. In response to our rapidly-changing times, the theme was revised to “Find the library at your place” to bring attention to how libraries are open for business online, offering the electronic services and digital content their communities need now more than ever.

First sponsored in 1958, National Library Week is a national observance sponsored by the American Library Association (ALA) and libraries of all types across the country each April.

For more information, visit the Law Library’s website!

This Week in the Law Library ….

What have we been up to in the Law Library? All kinds of things! The Law Library has never been just about physical space and books which is a good thing during a pandemic with everyone working remotely and practicing social distancing. We’ve been adding new online resources and improving access to others. We’re helping students and faculty every day with teaching, learning, and research. You might not be seeing our faces but we’re here working hard for you!

Research Instruction

We’re still teaching and you’re still learning! Although links to the legal research videos are posted on your TWEN or Canvas course, you can always access them from our Law Library Research Guides & Tutorials page too. This means you can access them for a refresher 24/7 even when you’re done with classes and working. Throughout April we’ll be teaching Federal Law, Administrative Law, Low Cost and Free Legal Resources, and Cost Effective Research.

Remote Research Help

We’re still answering your questions! Just email your favorite librarians.

Need help researching for a class or individual research project? Remember that we have lots of Law Library guides and videos to help! You can access all of our video tutorials and guides on the Law Library Research Guides & Tutorials page. Take a look at some of these specific guides:
Need to access a library resource? Below are the easiest ways to connect to various library resources in order to access them remotely:
  • Lexis, Westlaw, Bloomberg Law, CaseMakerX
    • Access by your normal methods with your normal username and passwords.
    • Need to register for Bloomberg Law? Go to https://profile.bna.com/bloomberglaw-activate/ and fill out the form.
      • You do not need an activation code. You do need to use your UC email as the email address
      • Look for the confirmation email and check your junk mail if you do not receive it
  •  West Academic Study Aids:
    • Go to https://subscription.westacademic.com, or the Research Tools & Databases on our website, or click on any of the links in the Exam Study Guide for individual West Academic Study Aid books. Sign in to your West Academic Study Aids account.
    • If you have not yet created an account, go to the Create an Account link in the top right corner of the page.l
      • Use your UC email as the email address.
      • Be on the lookout for a confirmation email after you sign up. Check your junk mail if you do not receive the confirmation email.
      • Technical Support — call: 1-877-888-1330 (option 4) or email: support@westacademic.com

Remote Teaching & Learning Assistance

Need help with remote teaching or learning? Check out our guides created specifically to help! We update these regularly as new resources come up and as people feel more comfortable using some of the advanced features of WebEx, Kaltura, and Office 365.

Selected COVID-19 Resources

This Week in the Law Library ….

Research Instruction

Monday, March 9, 2020

  • Advanced Legal Research
    • Associate Dean of Library Services & Director of the Law Library Michael Whiteman, Associate Director Susan Boland, and Electronic Resources & Instructional Services Librarian Ron Jones
    • 3:05pm – 4:30pm
    • Room 100B

Wednesday, March 11, 2020

  • Advanced Legal Research
    • Associate Dean of Library Services & Director of the Law Library Michael Whiteman, Associate Director Susan Boland, and Electronic Resources & Instructional Services Librarian Ron Jones
    • 3:05pm – 4:30pm
    • Room 104

Friday, March 13, 2020

  • Kaltura training
    • Legal Technology & Research Instructional Services Librarian Shannon Kemen
    • 12:15pm – 1:30pm
    • Room 302

Featured Guide

Oral Advocacy Guide

Oral Advocacy Guide

This guide is designed to provide you with resources to help you with oral arguments.

Featured Study Aids

Mastering Appellate Advocacy & Process

Mastering Appellate Advocacy cover

  • Mastering Appellate Advocacy and Process covers the range of appellate procedures in use across the United States, from preserving error below and on appeal, filing the notice of appeal, compiling the record, as well as appealable orders and judgments, proper parties on appeal, and appellate jurisdiction. The book also covers legal analysis, drafting, and advocacy techniques used in preparing appellate briefs, as well as oral advocacy techniques in a discussion that is useful to novices and old hands. Written for practicing lawyers as well as students, the book also includes a chapter devoted to that particular law school exercise known as moot court, identifying how typical moot court competitions are like, and unlike, real world appellate practice.
  • Available though the Lexis Digital Library (OverDrive) subscription

 

Successfully Competing in U.S. Moot Court Competitions

Successfully Competing in U.S. Moot Court Competitions cover

  • This guide addresses preparatory steps that should be taken prior to entering a moot court competition; recommends methods of analyzing and researching moot court problems; provides advice on how to draft an appellate brief for a moot court competition; sets out suggestions for preparing and delivering an appellate oral argument in a moot court competition; discusses competition logistics; and concludes with advice on keeping moot court competitions in perspective.
  • Available through the West Academic subscription

Featured Video

12 Tips for Appellate Advocacy

12ideasappadv

Michael Tigar, listed among the best oral advocates in American history, presents his 12 Ideas on Appellate Advocacy. A seasoned appellate advocate with 100’s of representative experiences, Mr. Tigar’s advice and reflections are invaluable to anyone interested in oral advocacy. Hosted by the Duke University Moot Court Board.

March Is Women’s History Month

The National Women’s History Month theme for 2020 is Valiant Women of the Vote. The theme honors the women who fought to win suffrage rights for women, and the women who continue to fight for the voting rights of others.

UC & Cincinnati Law Events Celebrating Women’s History Month

All month

Law Library Display: Celebrating Women’s History Month:  Valiant Women of the Vote

This month’s Law Library display features resources on women’s suffrage, with a particular focus on Ohio women. Stay tuned for the Law Library’s 100th Anniversary of the 19th Amendment Exhibit which will kick-off on March 24, 2020.

Law Library Display of Valiant Women of the Vote

UC Libraries Exhibit

The Walter C. Langsam Library exhibit on the 5th floor of the library celebrates the 100th anniversary of the 19th amendment throughout spring semester. It includes a timeline of the women’s suffrage fight starting in 1848 when Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott organized the first women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls, New York. Learn about milestones and setbacks along the way, including after the Civil War when the movement found itself divided over the issue of voting rights for black men, thus resulting in a split in the group fighting for women’s suffrage.

Rock the Vote at UC Blue Ash

In honor of Women’s HERstory Month at UC Blue Ash, get registered to vote, or just learn about the process. Mondays and Thursdays in March, 12:30-1:30 p.m., Muntz Commons, Bleecker Street Cafe area

UC Blue Ash feminine hygiene product drive

In honor of Women’s HERstory Month, UC Blue Ash will be accepting donations of feminine hygiene products (pads, pantyliners, tampons, sanitary cups, etc.). This drive will benefit Girls Health Period and the UC Blue Ash food/supply pantry. It will take place throughout March in the Student Life office, Muntz 123.

UC Law Women and If/When/How Period Week, March 8 – March 14th

Donate name brand pads by the College of Law’s 1st floor back entrance to benefit Girls Health Period.

Monday, March 9, 2020

  • Urgent conversations: Toward an Intersectional History of the 19th Amendment
    • The Jones Center for Race, Gender, and Social Justice’s Urgent Conversations topic is Toward an Intersectional History of the 19th Amendment in acknowledgment of the 100th anniversary of women’s suffrage in the United States
    • 4:45pm, room 208

 

Wednesday, March 11, 2020

  • Interactive Mystery Event sponsored by UC Law Women and If/When/How
    • Noon – 1pm between rooms 114 & 118

Thursday, March 12, 2020

  • Screening of Period. End of Sentence, sponsored by UC Law Women and If/When/How
    • Learn about how access to period products is a basic human right.
    • 7pm, room 118

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

  • Sisters-In-Arms Ceremony
    • Help celebrate UC’s Sisters in Arms recognition ceremony for all UC female student veterans. As part of Womens’ History Month in March, six women are honored each year for their accomplishments in and out of the classroom with the 2020 Rosa Sanders-Moore Award.
    • 6pm, Tangeman University Center Atrium

Thursday, March 26, 2020

  • Transgender Inclusive Training Session
    • In honor of Women’s HERstory Month, join a UC Blue Ash campuswide, all-inclusive transgender training session open to all students, faculty and staff. The event is facilitated by students under the expert tutelage of UC Blue Ash professor J.A. Carter.
    • 11am-12:20pm, UC Blue Ash, Muntz 119

 

Welcome Admitted Students!

The Law Library would like to welcome everyone attending the March Admitted Student Open House today! We hope that you will stop by the Law Library if you take a tour. Many prospective students are nervous about the law school experience. The following is a selective reading list of books that offer an introduction to the law school experience.

  • 1L of a Ride: A Well-Traveled Professor’s Roadmap to Success in the First Year of Law School
    • Available to UC students via the West Academic subscription and Law Stacks  KF287 .M38 2017
    • 1L of a Ride provides a candid, comprehensive roadmap to both academic and emotional success in law school’s crucial first year. Told in an accessible first-person voice, covered topics in the revised and updated third edition include pre-planning, top student fears, first-year curriculum, the Socratic and case methods of teaching, effective class participation, top habits of successful students, essential study techniques, legal research and writing, exam strategies, maintaining well-being, and much more. Combines anecdotes, comments from law students, empirical research, and authentic samples of signature documents from the 1L experience, including exam questions, Socratic dialogue, and student case-briefs, class notes, and course outlines. The author is an award-winning professor who has taught at six different law schools.
  • 1000 Days to the Bar, but the Practice of Law Begins Now
    • Law Stacks KF272 .T66 2003
    • This book that breaks law school learning strategies into understandable, logical and practical steps that maximize the effect of students’ study efforts, and explicitly ties those learning strategies to the strategies practicing lawyers use to understand, analyze and apply legal concepts in the real life representation of their clients.
  • Acing Your First Year of Law School: The Ten Steps to Success You Won’t Learn in Class
    • Law Stacks KF283 .N69 1999
    • Here is a manual that teaches you these ten skills so you can start learning your first day and ace your first year of law school.
  • Asked and Answered – Your Guide to Law School Success, Vol. 2, Advice for Second-Year Law Students
    • Available to UC students via the West Academic subscription
    • This text provides practical responses to the most commonly asked questions that second-year students have regarding career issues, such as where to find the right job this summer, building a great resume, writing a compelling cover letter, networking advice, and much more. Answers are provided by successful attorneys, law school professors, and career service professionals.
  • Bridging the Gap Between College and Law School
    • Law Stacks KF289 .S77 2014
    • This popular book helps students make the transition from their undergraduate experience to law school learning. Unlike other ”introduction to law school” texts, Bridging the Gap offers a different approach because it: explains the ”why” of law, providing students with the context necessary to understand why law school is taught in a certain manner; explains the ”how” of the law, setting out a step-by-step process that will help students adapt to the law school setting; explains the ”what” of the law, giving students the opportunity to practice the problem-solving process by providing numerous exercises in a variety of subject matter areas. Rather than giving only general advice, or black letter law and some practice problems for a specific subject, Bridging the Gap provides the context, the process, and the problems.
  • Coming to Law School: How to Prepare Yourself for the Next Three Years
    • Available to UC students via the Lexis OverDrive subscription
    • This book demystifies law school and the process of studying the law. The book shows how study skills such as case briefing, taking notes in class, and preparing exam outlines are interrelated and how an incoming student can practice them before coming to law school, making the transition from prospective to actual law student easier and as painless as possible. The book also contains information about many practical issues, including the law school process, how to do well in a summer job, and taking the bar exam.
  • Critical Reading for Success in Law School and Beyond
    • Available to UC students via the West Academic subscription
    • Critical Reading for Success in Law School and Beyond presents critical reading strategies in a systematic sequence so that students can become effective readers who are successful in both law school and in law practice. This reading system was developed by identifying the characteristics of expert readers at different stages of the reading process and then creating a curriculum to teach these skills. It contains essential ingredients for developing skills in reading comprehension as well as legal analysis, case evaluation, and case synthesis. Critical Reading starts with chapters on reading as an advocate and with focus and then introduces students to case structure as well as civil and criminal procedure. Students are then introduced to specific comprehension techniques such as case context, reading for an overview, reading facts, and strategies for understanding unclear text. Critical Reading then addresses strategies for making inferences, evaluating cases, and synthesizing cases.
  • Expert Learning for Law Students
    • Available to UC students via the Lexis OverDrive subscription and Law Stacks KF283 .S354 2018
    • The third edition of Expert Learning for Law Students is a reorganization and rethinking of this highly-regarded law school success text. It retains the core insights and lessons from prior editions while updating the materials to reflect recent insights such as mindset theory, attribution theory, chunking for use, and interleaving learning. The text includes exercises and step-by-step guides to engage readers in the process of becoming expert learners, including specific strategies for succeeding in law school.
  • Get a Running Start: Your Comprehensive Guide to the First Year Curriculum
    • Available to UC students via the West Academic subscription
    • This book offers a global overview of the first-year curriculum in a single volume. In short lessons, Get a Running Start covers all the major concepts taught in each of the courses most commonly offered in the first year of law school: criminal law, torts, civil procedure, constitutional law, property, and contracts. By reading through all the lessons for a course, first-year students will get a complete overview of each course early in the semester. As the semester goes forward, students can accelerate their learning and comprehension by reviewing individual lessons when preparing for class. As the semester comes to a close, the lessons in this book provide an invaluable framework for outlining and exam preparation. Among the many features of this book readers will find useful and attractive are: An introductory chapter offering advice on how to structure a successful preparation and study process starting with the summer before law school and running straight through exams. Insider advice from successful law students and recent graduates on class preparation, course selection, career development, and managing the stress of law school.
  • An Introduction to Law, Law Study, and the Lawyer’s Role
    • Law Stacks KF272 .M64 2010
    • This text looks at the subject of law, the study of law, and the practice of law.
  • The Language of Law School
    • Law Stacks KF279 .M47 2007
    • This text covers “learning to think like a lawyer.” This process, which subtly induces students to think and talk in radically new and different ways about conflicts, is largely accomplished in first-year law school classes where professors inculcate new attitudes toward spoken and written language. Elizabeth Mertz’s book is the first study to truly delve into that language to reveal the complexities of how this process takes place. She concludes that the transformation law students undergo is as much a shift in how they approach language-how they talk and read and write-as in how they “think.”
  • Law School Materials for Success
    • CALI E-book
    • To meet the demands of law school, it is often helpful to have the big picture before you begin – a sense of what it is you are trying to do as you prepare for classes, participate in those classes, review and prepare for exams, take exams, and then begin the cycle once again. Law School Materials for Success is designed to give you the essentials of that process.
  • Law School Success in a Nutshell
    • Available to UC students via the West Academic subscription and Law Stacks KF283 .B871 2017
    • This short book answers questions students have as they begin their studies. What is a tort? Hornbook? Should I join a study group? It also explains and gives examples of the best methods for studying and for taking exams. It provides questions and model answers from actual law school exams. The Nutshell also provides information about the types of legal practice that are available to you when you graduate. And it describes the opportunities that will be available to you during your second and third years of law school, such as law journals, law clinics, internships, joint degree programs, and study abroad.
  • Law School Survival Manual
    • Law Stacks KF283 .R37 2010
    • In the Law School Survival Manual, Nancy Rapoport and Jeff Van Niel serve as the friendly voice of experience whose wit and wisdom will guide you through law school from the application process to orientation, and from your first year to graduation – including summer jobs, clerkships, and the bar exam. This concise handbook focuses on all aspects of law school that are mystifying or tricky or both.
  • Law School Without Fear: Strategies for Success
    • Available to UC students via the West Academic subscription and Law Stacks KF240 .S52 2009
    • This concise, plain-spoken book is an indispensable guide for beginning law students. Field-tested by students all over the country for more than a dozen years for its practicality and its psychological realism, it has proved an invaluable introduction to cutting through the fog of case analysis; minimizing the bewilderment of the Socratic method; studying law; writing for law school; preparing for exams and exam writing; managing precious time; and coping with the emotional stress of law study.
  • One L of a Year
    • Available to UC students via the Lexis OverDrive subscription
    • The purpose of “One L of a Year” is to focus on the reading, studying and testing strategies used by the most successful law students. This book is more than advice—it is a learning guide based upon empirical research and statistical correlations between law student learning and their law school GPAs.Most importantly, this book attempts to show you what high-ranking law students have done to achieve success during their first year. It’s one thing to read about how to take a law school essay exam—it’s quite another thing to see examples of student essays, outlines, legal memoranda, and multiple choice questions.
  • Reading Like a Lawyer
    • Law Stacks KF283 .M398 2005
    • The ability to read law well is a critical, indispensable skill that can make or break the academic career of any aspiring lawyer. Reading law well is a skill that can be acquired through knowledge and practice. Using seven specific reading strategies, reinforced with hands-on exercises at the end of each chapter, this book shows you how you can read law like expert law students and expert lawyers do.
  • Starting off Right in Law School
    • Available to UC students via the Lexis OverDrive subscription
    • Law school is different. Incoming students, confronted with an entirely new vocabulary and unfamiliar with the discipline’s unique and demanding educational methods, are often disoriented. This book is designed to give these students a head start, both by introducing them to the fundamentals of the legal process and by helping them acquire the study skills necessary for success. Starting Off Right in Law School introduces new law students to the practice and study of law by following a lawsuit from its inception through the appeals process, illustrating what lawyers actually do, how they prepare, how they interact with clients and in courtrooms, how a lawsuit proceeds, and how students can effectively read and analyze cases, outline, and apply what they have learned on the exams.
  • Strategies for Legal Case Reading and Vocabulary Development
    • Law Stacks KF279 .M47 2007
    • Many law students feel that they are learning a new language during their first year of law school. For those students who are not native English speakers this process can be even more overwhelming. Strategies for Legal Case Reading and Vocabulary Development was written for just these students. The goal of the text is to help students develop the case reading and vocabulary strategies they will need to compete and succeed in an American law school.
  • Strategies & Tactics for the First Year Law Student (Maximize Your Grades)
    • Law Stacks KF283 .W35 2010
    • Strategies and Tactics for the First Year Law Student gives you a detailed, step-by-step program for surviving the first year of law school. It covers Note-taking–sharpening your note-taking skills will maximize your study time and improve your grades. Your law professor’s personality–understanding it can be to your advantage. Study traps–what are they and how to avoid them. Memory aids–how classic memory systems work and when you should (and shouldn’t) use them. The pressures of law school–effective techniques for handling the pressure from classmates, professors, and reading assignments. Taking exams–nine steps to writing exceptional exam answers. The Internet–useful search engines and websites.
  • What the L?
    • Law Stacks KF283 .M388 2010
    • Three recent graduates offer a completely candid student perspective on every aspect of law school, from classmates to bar review, and outlines to studying abroad.
  • Your Brain and Law School
    • Available to UC students via the Lexis OverDrive subscription
    • Based on the latest research, this entertaining, practical guide offers law students a formula for success in school, on the bar exam, and as a practicing attorney. Mastering the law, either as a law student or in practice, becomes much easier if one has a working knowledge of the brain’s basic habits. Before you can learn to think like a lawyer, you have to have some idea about how the brain thinks. The first part of this book translates the technical research, explaining learning strategies that work for the brain in law school specifically, and calling out other tactics that are useless (though often popular lures for the misinformed). This book is unique in explaining the science behind the advice and will save you from pursuing tempting shortcuts that will take you in the wrong direction. The second part explores the brain’s decision-making processes and cognitive biases. These biases affect the ability to persuade, a necessary skill of the successful lawyer. The book talks about the art and science of framing, the seductive lure of the confirmation and egocentric biases, and the egocentricity of the availability bias. This book uses easily recognizable examples from both law and life to illustrate the potential of these biases to draw humans to mistaken judgments.
  • A Weekly Guide to Being a Model Law Student
    • Available to UC students via the West Academic subscription
    • This book gives law students weekly checklists explaining the skills necessary to successfully navigate their first year of law school. Each chapter provides a checklist of things to do that week, such as briefing cases, going over notes, outlining classes, or doing practice questions. When a new concept is introduced, this book clearly explains the concept and its purpose and provides examples. It also includes a bank of over 100 short, medium, and long practice questions in six first year subjects.
  • The Zen of Law School Success
    • Available to UC students via the Lexis OverDrive subscription
    • Like the Zen path to enlightenment, law school success is about balance (between studying and other aspects of life, as well as balancing your study time between subjects, outlining, etc.), knowing your universe (knowing not only the subject matter tested, but knowing how the questions are constructed, knowing what to look for, etc.), knowing yourself (what type of essay writer you are, what type of learner you are, what type of exam taker you are, etc.), and staying focused on your path (when to study, what to do when you are stressed out, what to do when you don¿t know a subject very well, etc.). In addition to offering a comprehensive approach to succeeding in law school, the book also offers practical advice for doing well during the classroom Socratic method, navigating the law school environment, managing law school stress, and getting a job after graduation. Moreover, the Zen of Law School Success focuses on doing well on final exams, including specific strategies and tips for both essay and multiple choice exams. The book includes many exercises and model answers that will benefit any law student.

This Week at the Law Library ….

Research Instruction

Monday, March 2, 2020

  • Library & Lexis Lunch & Learn: How to Professionally Research a Problem from Start to Finish
    • Associate Director Susan Boland and Lexis Representative Ashley Russell will go through How to Professionally Research a Problem from Start to Finish as well as address summer access to Lexis, Westlaw, Bloomberg Law, and CaseMaker.
    • 12:15pm – 1:15pm
    • Room 118
    • Lunch & Lexis points provided!
  • Advanced Legal Research
    • Associate Dean of Library Services & Director of the Law Library Michael Whiteman, Associate Director Susan Boland, and Electronic Resources & Instructional Services Librarian Ron Jones
    • 3:05pm – 4:30pm
    • Room 100B

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

  • Advanced Legal Research
    • Associate Dean of Library Services & Director of the Law Library Michael Whiteman, Associate Director Susan Boland, and Electronic Resources & Instructional Services Librarian Ron Jones
    • 3:05pm – 4:30pm
    • Room 104

Featured Guide

MPRE Study Resources!

2020mpreguide

The Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination (MPRE) is a 60-question, two-hour-and-five-minute, multiple-choice examination administered three times each year. It is required for admission to the bars of all but four U.S. jurisdictions (Ohio is a jurisdiction that requires it). This guide provides resources to help you study for the exam.

Featured Database

ABA/BNA Lawyer’s Manual on Professional Conduct on Bloomberg Law

ABA/BNA_Lawyer’s_Manual_on_Professional Conduct

The Lawyer’s Manual’s mission is to provide authoritative guidance on professional responsibility law and malpractice to all practitioners. The publication offers in-depth analysis; full text of ABA ethics opinions, Model Rules, and Standards; summaries of ethics opinions issued by more than 60 state and local jurisdictions; and a current developments component providing the latest news and analysis of issues in the field of legal ethics.

Featured Study Aids

Acing Professional Responsibility
Acing_Professional_Responsibility_Cover

  • To prepare for the law school exams and the MPRE, this study aid features pages of text, numerous outlines, bullet points, sample essay questions and answers, and mini-checklists to learn the basics and fine points of Professional Responsibility. The materials are current through the Model Rules changes in 2016.
  • Available via the West Academic subscription

Q & A on Professional Responsibility

Q&A_Professional_Responsibility

  • This study aid offers a comprehensive review of the Model Rules of Professional Conduct, the Model Code of Judicial Conduct, and related doctrines of professional responsibility such as malpractice and disqualification law. It includes 208 questions, both multiple choice and short answer, along with complete explanations of the right and wrong answers.
  • Available via the LexisNexis Digital Library (Overdrive subscription)