Overview
This research guide aims to assist with research in the areas of International Commercial Law, International Trade, International Commercial Arbitration, and Foreign Domestic Commercial Law.
IICA Newsletter
- Institute of International Commercial Law at PaceNewsletter published by the Institute of International Commercial Law at Pace.
Reference Librarian
Contact Info Reference / Electronic Services Librarians & Adjunct Professor of Law Pace University School of Law Library Gerber Glass 201 C White Plains, NY, 10603 914-422-4339 Send Email Subjects: International Criminal Law |
Contact a Librarian
You may contact any of the reference librarians directly but your professor's liaison may be more familiar with the topics he/she is currently researching.
Key Questions
Treat Your Assignment Professionally!
- Treat your research assignment as if your professor was either a partner in a firm or your client.
- Take it seriously and be professional at all times.
Know the Basics
- What, when, where, who, why, how
Know the Scope of Your Project
- Make sure you understand the project. (What is it that you will be working on?)
- What are your professor's expectations? (Make sure you both are clear on it)
- If you don't understand, ask question(s), repeat the explanation of the project back to the professor, or paraphrase it, but make sure you fully understand.
- What are the deadlines for what parts of the project? (Set up a calendar)
- Should you have regular meetings? If so, how often?
- Are you expected to provide regular updates on your progress? If so, in what format and how often?
- Don't be afraid to ask your professor to recommend a place to start. (Sometimes your professor may suggest a book, article, case, author, or any other source for you to start with, which can save you a lot of time in the beginning.)
- How much time and effort (=money) are you expected to devote to this project?
- How are you expected to present the results? (How should your research be memorialized?)
Communicate
- What is your professor's preferred way of communication? Settle on one to avoid miscommunication.
- Are you working in a group? (figure out communication with your collaborators)
- Settle on a way to share information if you are working in a group.
- How should you be sharing information with your professor?
Articulate the Legal Question
- This may keep changing as you move forward with your research.
- Know the jurisdiction. (personal, geographical, subject matter)
- Civil or criminal?
- Public or private?
- Substantive or procedural?
- Who are the parties? (identify the type of entity)
- What relief is being sought?
Plan Your Research
- What sources will you need to consult?
- Statutes, case law, regulations, or administrative decisions?
- International Treaties, Agreements, Contracts, MOUs, Conventions, Declarations, or International Customary Law?
- Secondary materials: journal articles, law reviews, encyclopedias, hornbooks, treatises, overviews, summaries, newspapers, or annotations?
- Will you need to use specialized databases?
- Will you need to consult Internet resources?
- Will you need to request materials from other libraries? (You may not know the answer to this question in the beginning of your project, but be aware that you may need to do so and it takes time.)
- Is there a research guide including my topic that can help me to get started?
- Did you ASK your professor to recommend a source or other starting point?
Keep Track!
- Even in a firm you will keep a work log, so why not now?
- Keep track of all you do
- Research, search terms, search strings, results
- All sources you have consulted (whether print or online)
- Keep track of authors, titles, page numbers, volumes, and dates of publications
- Figure out a way to manage your online research (keep track of dates you have visited sites and note all URLs)
Legal Research Basics
Search Terms
Develop your research vocabulary (This may need to be modified as you find new materials.)
Use keywords and terms of art from indexes, digests, library catalogs, or online databases
Use a legal dictionary, thesaurus, encyclopedia, or treatises to identify alternatives
Strategies
Good place to start is a secondary source
Secondary sources discuss, analyze, explain, and provide an overview about the law; help to gain familiarity with terms of art and issues; lead to primary sources
One Good Case Method
Start with the "one good case."
Ask your professor.
Consult a secondary source.
Work with annotated statute. (Cross references case law and includes practice commentaries.)
Use Shepard's (Lexis.com or Lexis Advance) and KeyCite (WestlawNext) to find citing references and table of authorities of your "one good case."
Use the West Key Number System (Relevant topic and key number from your "one good case" can be used to find other cases assigned to the same topic and key number.





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