Transcript LAW

PUBLIC SCHOOL LAW
Part 10: Primary Legal Sources- Legislative
(Statute) Law
STATUTE LAW SOURCES
The publication of statutory law
Law first is published as a separate
document—slip law
It is then included in a chronological listing
of all statutes passed within a session of
Congress— often called session laws
It is cataloged by subject and placed within
something called a code
Federal Legislative Law
Once a law is passed, the text of the law is
given a number, called the Public law
number.
Public law number is made up of the
session of congress, and then each law is
numbered sequentially
Public Law Number for No Child Left
Behind Act is 107-110
United States Statutes at Large
All Federal laws are put into a publication called
United States
Statutes at Large
Statutes at Large
is simply a place
to put all laws as
they are passed.
More on the Statutes at Large
The United States Statutes at Large, typically referred to
as the Statutes at Large, is the permanent collection of
all laws and resolutions enacted during each session of
Congress.
The Statutes at Large is prepared and published by the
Office of the Federal Register (OFR), National Archives
and Records Administration (NARA).
Every public and private law passed by Congress is
published in the Statutes at Large in order of the date it
was enacted into law. The laws are arranged by
Public Law number and are cited by volume and
page number.
Statutes at Large Online
Statutes at Large (1789-1875) Library of Congress
Complete Collection of the United States Statutes at Large (17892012) Courtsey of the Constitution Society website. Even though the
pages are in pdf, the entire collection is searchable.
FDsys: Statutes at Large (1951-2010)
GPO Access: Statutes at Large (2003-2006)
FDsys: Public and Private Laws (1995-2013)
United States Code
Often, people want to search for the law
by topic
That would be difficult in Statutes at Large
So all of the laws in the Statutes at Large
were put into a subject arrangement called
the United States Code
United States Code
Arranged into 50 subject
areas called titles
Within each title, it is
divided into chapters
and paragraphs
The Code is updated with
annual supplements
More on the U.S. Code
The United States Code is the codification by subject
matter of the general and permanent laws of the United
States based on what is printed in the Statutes at Large.
It is divided by broad subjects into 50 titles and published
by the Office of the Law Revision Counsel of the U.S.
House of Representatives.
Since 1926, the United States Code has been published
every six years. In between editions, annual cumulative
supplements are published in order to present the most
current information. Documents are available only as
ASCII text files.
U.S. Code Online
FDsys: United States Code (1994-2012 editions)
FDsys contains the 2012, 2006, 2000, and 1994 editions of the U.S. Code, plus
annual supplements of 1994-1999, 2001-2005, 2007 through 2011.
The U.S. Code at the House of Representatives
These tables show where recently enacted laws will appear in the United States
Code and which sections of the Code have been amended by those laws. The tables
sorted in Public Law order may be used to identify the sections of the Code affected
by a particular law. The tables sorted in Code order may be used to determine
whether a particular section of the Code has recently been amended. The tables only
include those provisions of law that have been classified to the Code. The text of
recently enacted laws may be found through the Library of Congress Thomas web
site.
U.S. Code at the Legal Information Institute
The Legal Information Institute is located at the Cornell University School of Law and
contains primary and secondary sources of the law
Popular Names of Acts
Often Acts of Congress are known by a
name that is different than the official
name of the act.
This name is called the popular name
The US Code has a volume that contains
the popular names of all acts of congress
and the Public Law Number so that you
can find it in the Statutes at Large
Popular Names of Acts
Acts of Congress by Popular Name
http://uscode.house.gov/popularnames/popularnames.htm
Popular names of Acts in the US Code
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/topn/index.html
US Code: Popular Names
http://codes.lp.findlaw.com/uscodes/popularnames/index.html
ACTS CITED BY POPULAR NAME
http://uscode.house.gov/pdf/2006/2006uscPopNames.pdf
This is a pdf version of the print volume called Acts cited by popular
name
That is the end of part 10!! Isn’t this
information exciting?