--- name: Article Writing description: Structure and style guidance for law review articles version: 1.0.0 --- # Law Review Article Writing Skill **Domain:** Legal academic article structure and style **Version:** 1.0.0 **Last Updated:** 2025-12-15 ## Overview This skill provides guidance for structuring and writing law review articles, including traditional doctrinal pieces, empirical studies, and interdisciplinary scholarship. ## Standard Article Structure ### I. Introduction (5-10% of article) **Purpose:** Hook the reader, state the thesis, roadmap the article. **Elements:** 1. **Opening hook** - Compelling case, statistic, or puzzle 2. **Problem statement** - What issue does this article address? 3. **Thesis statement** - What does this article argue? 4. **Contribution claim** - Why does this matter? What's new? 5. **Roadmap** - Brief preview of article structure **Example opening patterns:** - Case study opening: "In *Smith v. Jones*, the court faced..." - Puzzle opening: "Legal scholars have long assumed X, but..." - Stakes opening: "Every year, thousands of defendants..." - Counter-intuitive opening: "Conventional wisdom holds that..." ### II. Background/Context (15-20%) **Purpose:** Give readers necessary context without rehashing basics. **Elements:** - Legal doctrine overview (only what's needed) - Historical development (if relevant) - Current state of scholarship - Gap identification (what's missing?) **Calibration:** Assume reader is smart lawyer unfamiliar with this specific area. ### III. Core Argument (40-50%) **Purpose:** Develop and support the thesis. **Structure options:** **Linear argument:** ``` A. First supporting claim 1. Evidence/authority 2. Analysis B. Second supporting claim 1. Evidence/authority 2. Analysis C. Third supporting claim ... ``` **Problem-solution:** ``` A. Problem detailed B. Existing solutions critiqued C. Proposed solution D. Solution defended ``` **Case study driven:** ``` A. Case 1 analysis B. Case 2 analysis C. Pattern identification D. Theoretical implications ``` ### IV. Counterarguments (10-15%) **Purpose:** Acknowledge and respond to objections. **Best practices:** - State opposing view fairly and strongly - Distinguish weak vs. strong objections - Provide substantive responses - Concede points where appropriate ### V. Implications/Applications (10-15%) **Purpose:** Show what follows from your argument. **Elements:** - Doctrinal implications - Policy recommendations - Future research directions - Limitations acknowledgment ### VI. Conclusion (5%) **Purpose:** Synthesize and close. **Elements:** - Restate thesis (fresh language) - Summarize key contributions - End with broader significance or call to action ## Writing Style Guidelines ### Voice and Tone - **Authoritative but not arrogant** - State claims confidently, acknowledge limitations - **Precise** - Legal writing demands exactness - **Accessible** - Avoid unnecessary jargon - **Engaging** - Vary sentence structure, use active voice ### Common Style Rules 1. **Prefer active voice** - Weak: "The statute was interpreted by the court..." - Strong: "The court interpreted the statute..." 2. **Avoid nominalizations** - Weak: "The implementation of the policy..." - Strong: "Implementing the policy..." 3. **Be specific** - Weak: "Courts have generally held..." - Strong: "The Second Circuit has consistently held..." 4. **Use strong verbs** - Weak: "The defendant made an argument that..." - Strong: "The defendant argued that..." 5. **Eliminate throat-clearing** - Cut: "It is important to note that..." - Cut: "It should be emphasized that..." - Cut: "It goes without saying that..." ### Paragraph Structure **IRAC for analytical paragraphs:** - **I**ssue - What question does this paragraph address? - **R**ule - What legal principle applies? - **A**nalysis - How does the rule apply to facts? - **C**onclusion - What follows? **Topic sentences:** - Every paragraph needs a clear topic sentence - Topic sentence should advance the argument - Reader should understand paragraph's point from first sentence ### Transition Strategies **Between sections:** - End section with forward reference - Begin section with backward reference - Use explicit transition sentences **Between paragraphs:** - Logical connectors (however, moreover, therefore) - Reference to previous paragraph's conclusion - Parallel structure ## Footnote Density **Academic standard:** Approximately 1 footnote per 2-3 sentences of text. **When to footnote:** - Direct quotations (always) - Specific claims of fact - Legal rules and holdings - Others' arguments you're engaging - Supporting examples **When NOT to footnote:** - Your own original analysis - General knowledge - Logical deductions from cited premises ## Length Calibration | Article Type | Word Count | Footnotes | |--------------|------------|-----------| | Student Note | 15,000-25,000 | 150-300 | | Standard Article | 20,000-35,000 | 200-400 | | Major Piece | 30,000-50,000 | 300-500 | | Essay/Commentary | 5,000-10,000 | 50-100 | ## Available Workflows - `workflows/structure-argument.md` - Develop article outline - `workflows/integrate-sources.md` - Weave sources into argument - `workflows/peer-review-prep.md` - Prepare for submission ## Quality Checklist Before completion, verify: - [ ] Thesis clearly stated in introduction - [ ] Each section advances the central argument - [ ] Counterarguments addressed fairly - [ ] Citations support claims made - [ ] Transitions smooth between sections - [ ] Conclusion synthesizes without mere repetition - [ ] No unsupported assertions - [ ] Voice consistent throughout --- *Legal scholarship persuades through rigorous argument and careful evidence.*