I am happy to share this guest post by Steven A. Mitchell, a law library faculty member at the Notre Dame Law School. It's about an amazing new course that Steven has designed and is teaching this spring at Notre Dame. As the courts increasingly rely on arguments from historical and linguistic sources, I expect courses like the one Steven is teaching will start becoming more widespread.
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One of the delights of being a Research and Instruction Librarian at Notre Dame Law School is having the opportunity to teach legal research courses. In the fall semester, we research librarians — all of whom have both a J.D. and a Masters in Library Science — teach a section or two of 1L students on fundamental principles of legal research. Students learn about the nature of legal information and how to find it, gain experience working with legal databases, and begin to adjust the way they think about research to suit the particular demands of the practice of law.
Then in the spring semester, each librarian teaches a smaller Advanced Legal Research (ALR) elective to 2L and 3L students. Whereas the curriculum for the 1L course is the same across every section, one feature of the ALR courses is they each focus on a particular subject in legal research, building on the foundation of the 1L course (and a summer or two of practice experience) and allowing students to dig deeper into a topic of personal or professional interest. At Notre Dame, recent ALR topics have included: federal law; state and local law; tax law; transactional law; legal analytics; free internet resources; and administrative law.
This spring I am excited to be introducing a new Advanced Legal Research course entitled History & Language in Practice. It is not just a new course at Notre Dame, but it may very well be the first course on this topic at any American law school. To quote the blurb for the course:
In recent decades, judges have taken an increased interest in incorporating interdisciplinary research into their legal decision-making process. This course introduces students to the research sources and methodologies of two areas which have become particularly important with the increased influence of originalism: history and language. Through exercises, research projects, and discussions of readings, students will learn how to critically address the pragmatic and theoretical questions a practicing lawyer should consider in their research: how to identify, find, evaluate, apply, and ethically use historical and linguistic information in the context of legal advocacy.
The idea for the course first germinated over the summer, following the end of the Supreme Court's October 2022 term. As readers of the Volokh Conspiracy will surely be aware, the term closed with a number of decisions where majority, concurring, and dissenting opinions alike all relied on extensive use and analysis of historical sources. This isn't a particularly new development; the use of history to answer legal questions has been in use in our judiciary for decades. For example, in the 2008 Heller decision, Justice Scalia's majority opinion and Justice Stevens's and Justice Breyer's dissents were competing accounts of the history of arms and militias in Anglo-American history, and each took as a given that reference to history was both proper and necessary.
For what is probably a confluence of many socio-political reasons, however, this most recent term seemed to bring the question of the use of history more into public conversation. In the course of my reading through that conversation, two posts in particular got my wheels turning as a law librarian and professor, leading me to develop this course: a column in the Washington Post by William Baude and a post by Olivia Smith Schlinck on the RIPS blog for law librarians. Though they surely have different opinions on law and politics, I found they both identified a lacuna in the way lawyers are trained and think about the use of interdisciplinary research in the practice of law.
The goal of the course is to address that gap. The use of both history and language in judicial decision-making is here and is likely here to stick around for quite a while. Therefore, lawyers should know how to conduct research in these areas and know how to then use the information that their research turns up. With increasingly more judges considering historical and linguistic matters in their decision-making, a good attorney (or a good judicial clerk) should be equipped to make arguments that account for those factors.
Though historical and linguistic arguments are often associated with the theory of originalism, the course very intentionally takes no position on jurisprudence. Rather, the course poses more practical questions: if you are arguing before a judge who considers history in their decision-making, how can you make arguments that the judge 'has ears to hear' and which will be persuasive? If you are clerking for such a judge, how can you find the appropriate resources and present them in your bench memos? And what role does professional and ethical responsibility play in how you use and convey that information? Indeed, the course will ideally be composed of students from multiple perspectives, in order to enrich the class discussions.
The syllabus for the course is conceived as roughly two strains which intertwine throughout the semester. First, students will learn about the various available sources that exist, the context of their creation or compilation, and how to effectively find the sources that meet their research goals. Topics will include English legal documents, American colonial documents, Founding Era documents, 19th-century documents, dictionaries, and historical corpora. (The cutoff for the course is the 19th century mostly for reasons of time; a single semester is only so long! But that cutoff is not entirely artificial, since it allows us to cover material through Reconstruction and the early constitutional and legal histories of a majority of the states, including those which Notre Dame students are most likely to practice in, upon graduation.)
Second, we will discuss the use of those sources specifically in the context of legal advocacy and decision-making. Is historical research in this context different from what a historian is doing, even a legal historian? Should it be? If so, how and what impact does that have? Should courts appoint historians as experts? Or is the use of history in legal advocacy an illegitimate weaponization of the subject? What are the advantages and shortcomings of dictionaries for linguistic research? How should non-legal documents inform questions about legal language? Are historical corpora a reliable compilation of those documents? In short: what constitutes an ethical use of history and language in the practice of law? While the tension between Baude and Schlinck provides the initial framework for these questions, it will be further explored through recent scholarship on these questions, through readings, class discussions, and individual reflections. This practice-oriented approach is where the course diverges from a typical course on legal history, and it is what potentially makes the course the first of its kind.
To that end, the final assignment for the course will not be a typical research paper. Rather, the students will be presented with a fictional case, will be assigned to small groups, and will be tasked with drafting a court brief that draws on historical and linguistic research. Groups will write as advocates for one of the parties or as amicus curiae — something which also gives the us the opportunity to discuss the different roles of advocacy and responsibility between lawyers representing parties in the case and amici arguing on behalf of third parties who have their own distinct interests.
While the focus of this new ALR course is on historical and linguistic resources, its aim is ultimately to further foster in students the skills that librarians refer to as 'information literacy', which I summarize in the final line of the course listing: the ability 'to identify, find, evaluate, apply, and ethically use . . . information'. These are skills which all lawyers should have, but which not all law schools teach well, and which recent developments in our law are increasingly demonstrating a need for in contexts that reach beyond conventional conceptions of 'law'. And by teaching students how to navigate sources they are less accustomed to and to critically think about their research in areas that are less familiar, I hope to also cultivate those same habits in more routine legal research throughout their careers.
The post Guest Post by Steven A. Mitchell: History & Language in Practice appeared first on Reason.com.