Research Paper?
There is nothing more important in the practice of law than your ability to put together quality written work.
Research Paper is one of the ways to express what you actually posses in terms of your skills, creativity and
originality in thinking. Reading does not only suffice the purpose of you being in a law school you have to back
your knowledge with writing some solid research papers.
Research papers or Scholarly papers are scholarly/academic articles that contain the results of original research
which is also known as Primary or an evaluation of research conducted by others know as Secondary. The
primary requirement of a research paper is to trace information about a topic, take a stand on that topic, and
provide support (or evidence) for that position in an organized report. The essence of a research paper lies in the
objective of the paper. Therefore, a good research paper conveys the findings of the research in crisp and
concise form without being muddled by the wordplay adopted by the author. The selection of the paper (if you
are sending it for publication in reputed journals) is done on the basis of peer review which ensures the quality
of the paper remains intact to merit publication.
Selection of topic
Research on the topic.
Analyse and Plan
Drafting/Editing
Preparing the final Text
Pick something you are interested in: Whenever possible, choose a topic that you feel passionate and
comfortable about. Writing about something you enjoy certainly shows in the final product, making it more
likely that you will be successful writing a paper about something you enjoy. For example, if you are really
interested in Constitutional Law, write something which involves the constitutional principle or constitutional
issue. Stick to it and don’t digress.
Consult: if even you are a master in a subject you might not come out with a research paper. Therefore, consult.
Consult with your colleagues, teachers etc. They can inspire you with new ideas.
Never hesitate to change topic: if you choose a topic, begin with research, and realize that it isn’t the right topic
for you for some reason, don’t worry! Change the topic and restart the research.
Research not just Google: Remember, just don’t go about Googling the research topic, you may end up finding
nothing. Books should be the primary areas of research. Read as much as you can. It will not only give you a
better insight but also help you connect things better and understand if there are loopholes in your research.
Visit Library and use database: As Stated in the paragraph above, there is some specific Online Search Engine
for specific subjects for example:
Manupatra: it provides judgments across all subjects of law of Supreme Court, all Indian High Courts, Orders
of the Tribunals, bills, central and state Acts, notification and circulars, ordinances, committee reports and more.
Corporate Law Advisor: It contains access to search, browse, view & print judgments contained in all journals
published by All India Reporter Private Limited for the years 2007 – 2013.
Advocate Khoj: It is a free legal information web portal which provides for individuals to find lawyers for their
legal needs and for lawyers to get leads matching their legal specialty. It includes over 6000 legal forms
including legal tips, areas of law, legal forms, agreements, Supreme Court judgments, bare acts, rules and a
glossary.
Economic & political weekly: Economic & Political Weekly (EPW) publishes analysis of contemporary affairs
side by side with academic papers in the social sciences.
Jstor: JSTOR is a digital library currently including more than 2,000 academic journals of both
multidisciplinary and discipline-specific collections, dating back to the first volume ever published, along with
thousands of monographs and other materials relevant for education. Because of JSTOR’s archival mission,
there is a gap, typically from 1 to 5 years, between the most recently published journal issue and the back issues
available in JSTOR.
Lexis Nexis: Apart from this, if you are wondering whether you can get books online? Yes, you can use lexi
nexis online database which contains full text judgments and Acts of Supreme Court of India, All High Courts,
All Tribunals & Central Acts and commentaries in corporate, commercial, banking & finance, intellectual
property, ADR, civil and criminal law. It also contains US legal & all commonwealth cases.
Annotate your research: Once you’ve gathered all your research, print it out (if it is an online source) and gather
post-its or anything you need to mark notes in the books/magazines you are using. This step is very important:
read through your research, take notes on what you think is important, and highlight key facts and phrases.
Write directly on copies you’ve made, or use slips of paper tucked into pages to mark places of importance. Use
highlighters to mark important point and use sticky notes to mark important pages, yes they do make
difference!!
Identify the goal of the paper: there are two types of research paper: an argumentative research paper or an
analytic research paper.
An argumentative research paper takes a position on a contentious issue and argues for one point
of view. The issue should be debatable with a logical counter argument.
For example: whether the new criminal law amendment bill is sufficient to protect the crime against women?
An analytic research paper offers a fresh look at an important issue. The subject may not be
controversial, but you must attempt to persuade your audience that your ideas have merit.
Determine your audience: the most important which the author tends to skip is to determine to whom they are
writing for? Who would be reading this paper, should it be published? Although you want to write for your
professor or other superior, it is important that the tone and focus of your paper reflect the audience who will be
reading it. If you’re writing for academic peers, then the information you include should reflect the information
you already know; you don’t need to explain basic ideas or theories. On the other hand, if you are writing for an
audience who doesn’t know much about your subject, it will be important to include explanations and examples
of more fundamental ideas and theories related to your research.
Drafting
Finalize your outline: With the aforementioned tips taken into consideration, organize your entire outline.
Justify main points to the left, and indent subsections and notes from your research below each. The outline
should be an overview of your entire paper in bullet points. Make sure to include in-text citations at the end of
each point, so that you don’t have to constantly refer back to your research when writing your final paper.
Consider formatting guidelines: Depending on your paper rubric, class guidelines, or formatting guidelines, you
may have to organize your paper in a specific way. For example, when writing in APA format you must
organize your paper by headings including the introduction, methods, results, and discussion. These guidelines
will alter the way you craft your outline and final paper. For this, go through the submission guideline given in
the rules in the brochure of any journal for which you are trying to write. It is important to look the font size,
line spacing, Citation method.
Citations: Acknowledging the authors and scholars. (What are citations and how to prevent plagiarism?)
When you are copying or paraphrasing a particular sentence or paragraph from another source, you are required
mandatorily (and this is serious stuff) to cite the proper authorities from which you have gathered the
information. The Citation is added by using the keyboard short cut: Alt+Ctrl+F.
For example: if you have copied a line from D.D. Basu (Book on Constitutional law), all you need to do is, at
the end of the line/sentence, enter a footnote and in it enter the book’s name with the author, year of publishing,
book edition and the page number. Citation mark for Example, is either marked at the end of the line or in
[1]
some case on the word where the word forms the essence of the research paper, for example if writing on
fundamental rights so the word ‘basic structure’ may be cited as: fundamental rights forms the basic
structure of our constitution. Here, the word ‘basic structure is cited. Also, if you have taken this whole line
[2]
form a book you can cite like this, fundamental rights forms the basic structure. Therefore, the citation is
[3]
The hierarchy or order of the arrangement is guided by many citation formats, which are generally stated in the
research paper invitation itself. For example, if it is mentioned that follow ‘Bluebook edition number 19’, then
you need to refer to this particular citation format and follow how this format tells you to cite books, cases and
other authorities. (Refer the module on Bluebook Citation)
When you do this without any kind of manipulation, there are no chances of your paper being rejected for
plagiarism. Plagiarism is the practice of presenting someone else’s work or ideas as one’s own. Thus, if you
plagiarize, you may end up in some serious trouble as it is ethically wrong and is considered so by every
institution/body. Mind it!!
1. Try to set aside your draft for a day or two before revising. This makes it easier to view your work
objectively and see any gaps or problems.
2. Revising involves rethinking your ideas, refining your arguments, reorganizing paragraphs, and
rewording sentences. You may need to develop your ideas in more detail, give more evidence to
support your claims, or delete material that is unnecessary.
3. Read your paper out loud. This sometimes makes it easier to identify writing that is awkward or
unclear.
4. Have somebody else read the paper and tell you if there’s anything that’s unclear or confusing.
1. Acknowledgment
2. Declaration
3. Table of Contents
4. Index of Authorities (Would include cases that you have referred to).You may also include a list of
Abbreviations if you have used any after this, though it is not mandatory to do so.
5. Scope
6. Limitations
7. Literature Survey/Resources Used
8. Research Questions/Hypothesis
9. Chapterization
10. Abstract
11. Introduction
12. Chapters respectively
13. Conclusion: Will mainly include what opinion or judgement you, as a researcher, have formed
about the topic after the research.
14. Bibliography
Kindly Note: Introduction, Conclusion and Bibliography are NOT parts of Chapterization!
Acknowledgment
Sample: We/I take this opportunity to express our profound gratitude and deep regards to our (Professor) for
her/his exemplary guidance, monitoring and constant encouragement throughout the completion of this project
topic. The blessing, help and guidance given by him/her time to time shall carry me a long way in the journey of
life on which we are about to embark. Also, the guideline provided by him/her to stick to the deadline was also
encouraging.
We/I have taken efforts in this project. However, it would not have been possible without the kind support and
help of many individuals and organizations. We/I would like to extend my sincere thanks to all of them.
Our/My thanks and appreciations also go to my colleague in developing the project and people who have
willingly helped me out with their abilities.
We/I are/am obliged to students of (College) for the valuable information provided by them in their respective
fields. Lastly, we/I thank almighty, our/my parents, brother, sisters and friends for their constant encouragement
without which this assignment would not be possible.
This too, is an integral part of a journal or paper being published wherein you, as an author, declare that your
work is original and would not attract plagiarism or copyright issues.
Sample: We hereby declare that we (Name of the author(s)) are the authors of this research paper. The text
reported in the project is the outcome of our own efforts and no part of this project assignment has been copied
in any unauthorized manner and no part of it has been incorporated without due acknowledgement to their
rightful sources and source persons. We authorize (University Name) to lend this research paper to other
institutions or individuals for the purpose of scholarly research.
Table of Contents
Index of Authorities
Scope
Statement of Problem/Aim/Scope of the Research Paper: This includes presenting a skeleton of your subject
matter. In simpler terms, under this sub-heading, you have to state what your “research problem” is. Say, you
are working on an environmental issue:
Sample: “This research paper will highlight the issue of sustainable development in India in comparison to
issues of ecology in the United States of America and how current global development needs to be checked to
sustain along with ecology. Also, this research paper also aims to cover case laws decided by the Indian
Supreme Court vis-à-vis decisions of committees on sustainable development.”
Limitations
This seeks to restrict the scope of your research topic – the things that you do not want to include in your paper,
like any other related issue or areas which may widen the scope of your topic. So here is where you restrict the
scope of your topic to what you as a researcher would want. A sample of a limitation clause would look like
this:
Sample: “During the course of validating and analyzing resources that the researcher has relied upon, it has been
strongly felt that the ambit of this area of law is underdeveloped, especially in India. And therefore, the
researcher has found in the course of looking for information that the information is unorganized and scattered.
The researcher will be working on the available information through the resources previously categorized to
emphasize on the relevant issues pertaining to the topic.”
Literature Survey/Resources Used: The former (Literary Survey) is mostly used at the post-graduate level
wherein you are required to give detailed information about the resources you have relied upon to support your
research and compare between them. The latter gives a simplistic detail of the primary resources you have relied
on – for instance, The Environment Protection Act or the Brundtland Report etc.
There are essentially three kinds of resources – Primary (Statutes, Case Laws, Original Works or
Books),Secondary (Articles – Both online and offline, Journals, Commentaries, Dictionaries, Compendiums and
Encyclopedias) and Tertiary (Not used as much, but those online resources which make reference to the primary
and secondary sources) resources.
Research Questions/Hypothesis
There lies a basic difference between “research questions” and formulating a “hypothesis” to a research paper.
Research questions are the questions which you would put forth, as a researcher, to explore your topic. For
example:
Is Indian Environment Protection Act, 1986 adequate enough to cover all aspects of ecological
issues?Or
Are United State laws on environment more comprehensive in penalizing offenders than Indian
laws?
A Hypothesis on the other hand, is a premise or presupposition, on the basis of which one furthers one’s
research. It expresses the expectation of a researcher and is the basis on which one starts one’s research paper
and also represents how one expects to end it. Remember, do not get lost in the technical heaviness of the word.
Look at it from the perspective of a researcher and you will understand that this is an idea which you have in
mind when you start – it might get validated or negated in the course of your research. It looks something like
this:
“The Indian environmental laws are inadequate in protecting the ecology in the globalizing world”
Please notice that there is already a concrete idea as to what the researcher wants to look at here – that Indian
environmental laws are inadequate
Chapterization
Chapters should be reflection of what your research questions are asking and must divide your research into
logical flow. The number of chapters should not be less than three and should be arranged in an answering
manner. Your first chapter could explore what your topic is followed by the second which addresses your
concerns about the area and third would be a comparative analysis of your topic.
Abstract:
The full and final paper is often preceded by an abstract submission that acts as a summary of what you are
going to write/research on the topic. This is in a way act as a filter for the peer reviewer. Therefore, in the
abstract (normally in 200-300 words) you have to give the pin point summary of the research topic and the
objective. After selection of commendable papers, a peer review panel might opt for an online publication or
release a periodic journal. More can be found in the ‘Research Papers’ section.
Introduction
Give a brief Introduction of the Topic. This may also include some background information of the topic. You
may also include important case law to describe a situation if you are not getting substantive material. For
Example: if you are writing on sexual Harassment, you can write about Vishakha v. State of Rajasthan Case.
Body
Proceed with your ideas and avoid repeating the phrases.
Paragraphing: use paragraphs as a planning tool. As you write, form your thought into paragraphs. Begin each
paragraph with one or two sentences that introduces the topic. The beginning of the paragraph must always have
some kind of a ‘hook’ with the last paragraph.
Conclusion
Lastly, conclude the research paper taking your stand. If have already supported your arguments with the
authorities, this is a kind of a prayer, so conclude in affirmative or negative tone as the case may be.
Kindly Note: Please proof read the paper atleast 4 time before sending the Research Paper.
Here are some Websites where you can get updates/opportunity of call for Papers:
www.legaldesire.com
www.knowledgesteez.com
www.projectcloud.com
www.lawlex.org
www.legallyindia.com
www.indiacorplawblog.com
[3] DD Basu, The Constitution of India, Vol 1, pg. 1111, Lexis Nexis. (According to citation format as
applicable or desired)
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