Cara Cunningham
Much like I did almost twenty years ago, law students around the world spent their December breaks focused on this year’s Jessup problem. For those with electronic research capabilities, however, the research path was very different. Unlike me, they did not have to do battle with a stack of dusty books. They did not have to brave the cold and lonely library. In fact, they did not have to leave the comfort of their homes and fluffy slippers. They missed out on part of the challenge, and, I think, part of the fun. This presents a new challenge.
Electronic research has changed the game. The mission is no longer to find the needle in the haystack. Given the depth of coverage, the ease of access, and speed of recovery, there are no hidden gems or beautiful needles waiting to be unearthed. The gems and needles appear, in abundance, after the student types in a general word search and hits enter.
In fact, electronic research has so dramatically changed the landscape that legal writing scholars are reconceptualizing their research textbooks. The legal writing community is also looking for new ways to describe the act of research itself. At a recent national writing conference, an entire session was devoted to what metaphors appropriately describe legal research. (Don’t laugh. This is not an abstract question for people with extra time on their hands.) Legal research is changing fundamentally. This shift is reflected in our efforts to find words that describe it, so we can relate to our students and teach them research skills.
Describing legal research as mining for gold or seeking hidden treasure was apropos for my generation and those before it. It is a description that is lost on today’s generation. Instead, they are faced with a vast and new frontier. Their research tends to yield too much seemingly relevant and usable information. Their mission is to work through all of the “needles” and “gems,” to isolate those that are most helpful, and to do so as efficiently as possible.
So how do we tackle this new frontier? I suggest an old-fashioned approach: A simple research plan. Yes, it does take time to prepare. And, yes, it flies in the face of the “Let’s Google It” approach we use when seeking instantaneous information. But using a research plan actually saves time and can improve your results. It is the same as taping before you paint. The better prepared you are before you start a task, the better the end product will be. Put another way, taking your time in the beginning, may save you time in the end.
A research plan has two parts. The first step is one that most of us already do: Identify your research questions. The only point I would add here is to distinguish between background and dispositive questions. A researcher first should identify any background or foundational questions she has on the topic. For example, when researching whether there is a testimonial privilege for reporters seeking to keep confidential the identify of a source, a researcher might want to know what is a testimonial privilege in general? What testimonial privileges have been recognized? Which have been rejected and why? Is there a binding statute or case on point? Once the background questions are identified, the researcher is then able to identify more detailed dispositive research questions. (Is the test with respect to the recognition of testimonial privileges met in my case?)
Professor Cara Cunningham joined the UDM Law Faculty in 2000. She teaches Applied Legal Theory and Analysis, Advanced Appellate Advocacy, International Advocacy, and Public International Law. She has been twice named Faculty Member of the Year by the Moot Court Board of Advocates. In addition to teaching, she serves as the curriculum director for the Law School's two joint-degree programs: The Canadian & American Dual J.D. Program with the University of Windsor Faculty of Law and The Degrees of the Americas Program with the Instituto Tecnologico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey. She also is an active member of the Legal Writing Institute, serving on its Global Legal Skills Committee.
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