Introduction
Topic selection is quite possibly the most important and difficult part of the seminar paper writing process. This guide will list several resources to help you pick and narrow a topic for your Property Law Seminar Paper.
No matter what area of law your paper covers, there are three basic categories of legal topics:
(1) the law is unclear because of conflict between jurisdictions, or
(2) new situations that have yet to be tested in court, or
(3) changes in society/technology that render a current rule no longer equitable
The topic you select should be something that has not been extensively covered by other authors. You should also take care that you have picked a topic that is broad enough that you’ll be able to find enough to write about but narrow enough to be tackled in a single semester. Remember that you’ll be living with the topic for the next few months. The best papers are going to come out of topics that interest you. Finally, you may find a topic when you least expect it – even while watching TV or reading a magazine!
General Print Resources
Elizabeth Fajans & Mary K. Falk. Scholarly Writing for Law Students: Seminar Papers, Law Review Notes, and Law Review Competition Papers – KF 250. F35 On Reserve under Property Seminar
Heather Meeker, Stalking the Golden Topic: A Guide to Locating and Selecting Topics for Legal Research Papers. 1996 Utah L. Rev. 917 (1996)
Eugene Vokokh. Academic Legal Writing – KF 250. V6 2003 On Reserve under Property Seminar
The above are general resources on a how to pick a topic, structure a seminar paper, etc. Generally, materials dealing with Property Law may be found on the second floor of the library in the call number range KF 560 - 720. Specifics can be found using the library catalog. (Handout on using the catalog here:
infokat catalog handout 2007.doc) Also, a listing of the Property Law Treatises held by UK Law Library can be found here:
Property Law Treatises.doc.
Another option is to look in either the American Law Reports (ALR), American Jurisprudence (AmJur) or Corpus Juris Secundum (CJS) under a topic that interests you and see if the annotations lead you to unanswered questions or jurisdictional conflicts. These books are all shelved on the first floor of the law library on the shelves immediately on your left as your enter the reading room.
Print Current Awareness
Powell on Real Property - KF 570. P6 On Second Floor of Law Library
National Property Law Digests - KF 567.8. N38 On Second Floor of Law Library
- This is a monthly newsletter-type publication that provides basic information (no analysis) of court "decisions of national significance."
Real Estate Law Digest - KF 567. A5 R40 On Second Floor of the Law Library
- This is a looseleaf service. Check the "Supplement" tab in the back of each binder for recent court decisions.
Subscription Databases
BNA United States Law Week and Supreme Court Today (UK Law Only)
- United States Law Week - options
-
Supreme Court Today
- Browse issues, which divide cases up by general topic headings
- Search issues
Westlaw
-
In the directory, go to: Law Reviews, Bar Journals & Legal Periodicals - Westlaw Highlights and Bulletins - Westlaw Topical Highlights. NOTE: there will be several relevant topics. These aren't databases within Westlaw to be searched, but rather once you click on the topic heading, you will be given a result list of documents that West Editors have created highlighting recent developments.
Lexis
- From the main Total Research System page, click on: Search - Sources - Area of Law by Topic. There are several topics that would be appropriate for this course. Some of them have an "emerging issues" file that may provide topic ideas. If not, they all will have a "legal news" file.
- From the main Total Research System page, click on: Search - Guided Search Forms - then select area of law
If you're really interested in writing about a jurisdictional conflict, in both Westlaw and Lexis you can search the federal courts, ALR or AmJur databases with a search such as "circuit w/5 split." For the case databases, you should probably limit your search by date to within the past year and can further refine by subject.
Blogs
Property Prof Blog
Land Use Prof Blog
Environment Law Prof Blog
JURIST - Paper Chase
Blawg Republic (Be sure to also check the directory to find subject-specific blogs)
Split Circuits
Legal News/Periodicals (Not Law Journals)
National Law Journal (Also available in print in Reference Lobby and electronically via Westlaw)
Legal Times (Also available in print in Reference Lobby and electronically via Westlaw)
Lawyers USA (Also available in print in Reference Lobby)
Louisville Bar Briefs (Available in print in Reference Lobby - The "Kentucky Supreme Court Report" section is particularly valuable)
ABA Journal (Also available in print in Reference Lobby.)
Hieros Gamos Legal News Center
General News/Periodicals
Lexington Herald Leader (Also available in print in Reference Lobby)
Louisville Courier-Journal (Also available in print in Reference Lobby)
New York Times (Also available in print in Reference Lobby)
USA Today (Also available in print in Reference Lobby)
Wall Street Journal (Also available in print in Reference Lobby)
Washington Post
NOTE: For full electronic coverage and past issues of newspapers, use Lexis, Westlaw or UK Libraries subscriptions.
The American Prospect (Also available in print in Reference Lobby)
MS. (Also available in print in Reference Lobby)
National Review (Also available in print in Reference Lobby)
Time (Also available in print in Reference Lobby)
U.S. News & World Report (Also available in print in Reference Lobby)
Internet Resources (not blogs)
American Bar Association Section on Real Property, Probate and Trust (The RPPT eReport is especially useful)
Findlaw: Legal Subjects: Property Law (Also contains links to other relevant guides on Findlaw)
Hieros Gamos - Guide to Real Estate Law (Also contains links to other relevant guides on HG.org)
Megalaw - Real Property (Contains links to several publications and newsletters. Megalaw also has other potentially relevant topics listed in its Topic Index.)
Washburn University Property Law Guide
Before You Start Writing
Before you start writing your paper, you should check that the topic hasn't been covered extensively already. The following databases will allow you to search law journals. Remember that Lexis and Westlaw's coverage only goes back about twenty years. All of the following are linked from the UK Law Library's Law Databases Page.
Lexis (password protected)
Westlaw (password protected)
HeinOnline (UK Law Only)
Index to Legal Periodicals (UK Law Only)
LegalTrac (UK Law Only)
Finally...
If you have any questions about how to use any of the above resources or would like assistance with the research portion of your seminar paper, please contact any memeber of the Law Library Reference Staff.
Comments (0)
You don't have permission to comment on this page.