- Source: Bluebook
- Source: Blue book
The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation (commonly known as the Blue Book or Harvard Citator) is a style guide that prescribes the most widely used legal citation system in the United States. It is taught and used at a majority of U.S. law schools and is also used in a majority of federal courts. Legal publishers also use several "house" citation styles in their works.
The Bluebook is compiled by the Harvard Law Review Association, the Columbia Law Review, the Yale Law Journal, and the University of Pennsylvania Law Review. Currently, it is in its 21st edition (published July 2020). Its name was first used for the 6th edition (1939). Opinions have differed regarding its origins at Yale and Harvard Law Schools, with the latter long claiming credit.
The Supreme Court uses its own unique citation style in its opinions, even though most of the justices and their law clerks obtained their legal education at law schools that use The Bluebook. Furthermore, many state courts have their own citation rules that take precedence over the guide for documents filed with those courts. Some of the local rules are simple modifications to The Bluebook system. Delaware's Supreme Court has promulgated rules of citation for unreported cases markedly different from its standards, and custom in that state as to the citation format of the Delaware Uniform Citation code also differs from it. In other states, the local rules differ from The Bluebook in that they use their own style guides. Attorneys in those states must be able to switch seamlessly between citation styles depending upon whether their work product is intended for a federal or state court. California has allowed citations in Bluebook as well as the state's own style manual, but many practitioners and courts continue recommending the California Style Manual.
An online-subscription version of The Bluebook was launched in 2008. A mobile version was launched in 2012 within the Rulebook app, which enables access for legal professionals to federal or state court rules, codes, and style manuals on iPad, and other mobile devices.
Elements
The 21st edition of The Bluebook governs the style and formatting of various references and elements of a legal publication, including:
History
While the legal citation manuals go as far back as 15th century (Modus Legendi Abbreviaturas in Utroque Iure, c. 1475), there were very few examples prior to the 20th century; law professor Byron D. Cooper mentions only few short articles "Rules for Citation" (The American Law Review, 1896) and "Methods of Citing Statute Law" (Ruppenthal, Law Library Journal, 1919). The Uniform System of Citations thus became a "pioneer" manual.
According to Harvard, the origin of The Bluebook was a pamphlet for proper citation forms for articles in the Harvard Law Review written by its editor, Erwin Griswold. However, according to a 2016 study by two Yale librarians, Harvard's claim is incorrect. They trace the origin of The Bluebook to a 1920 publication by Karl N. Llewellyn at Yale on how to write law journal materials for the Yale Law Journal. The authors point out that some of the material in the 1926 first edition of The Bluebook (as well as that in a 1922 Harvard precursor to it published as Instructions for Editorial Work) duplicate material in the 1920 Llewellen booklet and its 1921 successor, a blue pamphlet that the Yale Law Journal published as Abbreviations and Form of Citation.
For several years before the first edition of The Bluebook appeared, Yale, Columbia, and several other law journals "worked out a tentative citation plan", but Harvard initially opposed it "because of skepticism as to the results to be attained and in part because of a desire not to deviate from our forms especially at the solicitation of other Reviews". Eventually, Harvard "reversed course" and joined the coalition by 1926. According to Judge Henry J. Friendly, "Attorney General [Herbert] Brownell, whom I had known ever since law school—he was Editor-in-Chief of the Yale Law Journal the year I was at the Harvard Law Review and he and I and two others [from Columbia and Pennsylvania] were the authors of the first edition of the Bluebook."
The cover of the 1926 A Uniform System of Citation was green. The color was "brown from the second (1928) edition through the fifth (1936) edition. It was only with the sixth (1939) edition that it became blue." In 1939, the cover of the book was changed from brown to a "more patriotic blue", allegedly to avoid comparison with a color associated with Nazi Germany. The eleventh edition, published in 1967, was actually white with a blue border. The cover color returned to blue in the twelfth edition of 1976.
The full text of the first (1926) through the fifteenth (1991) editions is available on the official website.
The Bluebook uses two different styles. Practitioners use the first in preparing court documents and memoranda, while the second is used primarily in academic settings, such as law reviews and journals. The latter uses specific formatting to identify types of references, such as the use of small caps for books, newspapers, and law reviews. A rule of thumb used by many is to see if the formatting can be reproduced on a typewriter—if so, practitioners use it, if it requires typesetting, it is used for academic articles.
By 2011, The Bluebook was "the main guide and source of authority" on legal references for the past 90 years. It is recognized as the "gold standard" for legal references in the United States, even though it was originally designed only to help teach law students how to cite cases and other legal material. Although other citation systems exist, they have limited acceptance, and in general, The Bluebook is followed in the legal citation as the most widely accepted citation style, called the "Bible", the "final arbiter", even the legal citation "Kama Sutra". Some states have adopted The Bluebook in full, while others have partially adopted The Bluebook. States such as Texas have supplements, such as The Greenbook, that merely address citation issues unique to Texas and otherwise follow The Bluebook.
Variations
= Federal
=The Solicitor General issues a style guide that is designed to supplement The Bluebook. This guide focuses on citation for practitioners, so as an example, only two typefaces are used for law reviews, normal and italics. Other changes are also minor, such as moving supra from before the page referenced to after the page number. The guide does state that unless explicitly specified otherwise, The Bluebook rule takes precedence in the event of conflict.
= State
=California used to require use of the California Style Manual. In 2008, the California Supreme Court issued a rule giving an option of using either the California Style Manual or The Bluebook. The two styles are significantly different in citing cases, in use of ibid. or id. (for idem), and in citing books and journals. Michigan uses a separate official citation system issued as an administrative order of the Michigan Supreme Court. The primary difference is that the Michigan system "omits all periods in citations, uses italics somewhat differently, and does not use 'small caps.'" As noted, Texas merely supplements The Bluebook with items that are unique to Texas courts, such as citing cases when Texas was an independent republic, petition and writ history, Attorney General Opinions, and similar issues.
Reception
= Criticism of Bluebook's prolixity
=At over 500 pages for the 19th edition, The Bluebook is significantly more complicated than the citation systems used by most other fields. Legal scholars have called for its replacement with a simpler system. The University of Chicago uses the simplified "Maroonbook", and even simpler systems are in use by other parties.
Judge Richard Posner is "one of the founding fathers of Bluebook abolitionism, having advocated it for almost twenty-five years, ever since his 1986 University of Chicago Law Review article on the subject." In a 2011 Yale Law Journal article, he wrote:
The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation exemplifies hypertrophy in the anthropological sense. It is a monstrous growth, remote from the functional need for legal citation forms, that serves obscure needs of the legal culture and its student subculture.
He wrote that a cursory look at the Nineteenth Edition "put [him] in mind of Mr. Kurtz's dying words in Heart of Darkness—'The horror! The horror!'"
Posner personally uses a far simpler citation system based largely on the First Edition of the Bluebook. This system, which he includes in a manual he provides for his law clerks, was reprinted in the aforementioned Yale Law Journal article. At the time of the article, his citation system was 885 words long, or about two printed pages—far shorter than the 511 pages of the Nineteenth Edition, the 640 pages of the then-current ALWD Citation Manual, or the over 1,000 pages of the Chicago Manual of Style.
= BabyBlue copyright controversy
=Another dispute is over the copyright status of The Bluebook. Open-source advocates claim that The Bluebook is not protected under copyright because it is a critical piece of legal infrastructure. Lawyers who represent the Bluebook publishing consortium claim that the "carefully curated examples, explanations and other textual materials" are protected by copyright.
A group led by Professor Christopher J. Sprigman at NYU Law School prepared a "public-domain implementation of the Bluebook's Uniform System of Citation," which his group calls BabyBlue. However, a law firm (Ropes & Gray) representing the Harvard Law Review Association (HLRA) sent him a letter stating:
[W]e believe that BabyBlue may include content identical or substantially similar to content or other aspects of The Bluebook that constitute original works of authorship protected by copyright, and which are covered by various United States copyright registrations. ...
[M]y client has been and remains concerned that the publication and promotion of such a work may infringe the Reviews' copyright rights in The Bluebook and The Bluebook Online, and may cause substantial, irreparable harm to the Reviews and their rights and interests in those works. ...
[I]t is our client's position that the title BabyBlue, or any title consisting of or comprising the word "Blue", when used on or in connection with your work, would so resemble the BLUEBOOK Marks as to be likely, to cause confusion, mistake, and/or deception…Accordingly, and to avoid any risk of consumer confusion, my client respectfully demands that you agree (i) not to use the title or name BabyBlue, or any other title or name including the word "blue", for your work.
In response to the HLRA letter to Sprigman, over 150 students, faculty, staff, and alumni of Harvard Law School signed a petition supporting BabyBlue. Yale and NYU students added their separate petitions supporting BabyBlue. A posting in the Harvard Law Record commented:
The intellectual property claims that the HLR Association made may or may not be spurious. But independent of that, the tactics employed by the HLR Association's counsel in dealing with Mr. Malamud and Prof. Sprigman are deplorable. The Harvard Law Review claims to be an organization that promotes knowledge and access to legal scholarship. It is a venerated part of the traditions of Harvard Law School. But these actions by the Harvard Law Review speak of competition and not of justice.
The posting also suggested that HLRA should "redirect the money it spends on legal fees ($185,664 in 2013)" to a more worthy purpose.
David Post commented: "It's copyright nonsense, and Harvard should be ashamed of itself for loosing its legal hounds to dispense it in order to protect its (apparently fairly lucrative) publication monopoly."
On March 31, 2016, it was announced that the project had changed its name to the Indigo Book.
Financial controversy
For the first 50 years of the Bluebook's history, the Harvard Law Review kept 100 percent of the revenues. In 1974, the editors of the Columbia and University of Pennsylvania Law Reviews and the Yale Law Journal apparently discovered this, due to an indiscretion. They complained that Harvard was illegally keeping all profits from the first eleven editions, estimated to total $20,000 per year. After they threatened to sue, and considerable wrangling, Harvard agreed with them to split the revenue: 40 percent for Harvard, 20 percent each for Columbia, Pennsylvania, and Yale; Harvard would continue to provide the production and distribution services.
The law reviews have not disclosed the revenues of the Bluebook themselves, but revenues from the sale of the Bluebook have been estimated "in the millions of dollars".
A 2022 review of the Harvard Law Review's non-profit disclosures found that the Bluebook had made $1.2 million in profits in 2020, with The Harvard Law Review taking an 8.5% cut of profits for administrative services and the remainder split equally among the four law reviews. Profits from the Bluebook totaled $16 million between 2011 and 2020. Excluding the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, the law review's endowments total $59.4 million.
Legal technology and future
The Bluebook has also been affected by the disruptions to the legal industry due to legal technology. In 2017, the startup company LegalEase launched a legal citation generator that enables its users to create citations in the Bluebook format. LawStar.io offers a similar product with the addition of 1-click citations.
See also
Case citation
Legal citation signals
Australian Guide to Legal Citation
Canadian Guide to Uniform Legal Citation
Oxford Standard for Citation of Legal Authorities (OSCOLA; UK)
References
Sources
Cooper, Byron D. (1982). "Anglo-American Legal Citation: Historical Development and Library Implications". Law Library Journal. 75 (3): 1745–. Retrieved 2024-03-19.
External links
The Indigo Book: An Open and Compatible Implementation of a Uniform System of Citation, a public-domain implementation of the Bluebook rules
Introduction to legal citation, by Peter W. Martin
A Bluebook Guide for Law Students, by Scott Akehurst-Moore
Blue book may refer to:
Academia and education
Blue book exam, an essay test named for the "blue book" pamphlet testees write into
A component of the Blue and Brown Books, containing lectures by Ludwig Wittgenstein in 1933 and 1934
Computing and technology
Blue Book (CD standard), a compact disc media format
A common name of the book Smalltalk-80: The Language and its Implementation
Blue Book protocol, the file transfer protocol of the Coloured Book protocols
The Java Virtual Machine specification
Ingo Wegener's Blue Book (The Complexity of Boolean Functions), a circuit complexity textbook
Government and finance
Blue book, the database of candidates who qualify for preselection in the traineeship scheme of the European Commission
The Diplomatic Bluebook of Japan, an annual report on Japan's foreign policy
= United Kingdom
=British Blue Books, collections of diplomatic correspondence
United Kingdom National Accounts – "The Blue Book", an annual report
The "Treachery of the Blue Books", a controversial 1847 British government report disparaging Wales
Blue Book (Bryce and Toynbee book), a government report on the Armenian genocide
The Blue Book, Political Truth or Historical Fact, a 2009 documentary film about the report
= United States
=Blue Book (FCC) (Public Service Responsibility of Broadcast Licensees), a 1946 report
Blue Book (United States Marine Corps), a bulletin listing the lineal precedence and seniority of Marine Corps officers
Project Blue Book, a U.S. Air Force study on UFOs in the 1950s and 1960s
Regulations for the Order and Discipline of the Troops of the United States, a Revolutionary War drill manual colloquially referred to as the "Blue Book"
Blue Book, American name for a World War II Japanese naval code
The Blue Book of Denver society, originally by Louise Sneed Hill
The Blue Book of the John Birch Society, a transcript of the society's founding meeting
The Blue Book Network, a US media company
State government information registers
Official Manual State of Missouri ("Missouri Blue Book")
Oregon Blue Book
Tennessee Blue Book
Wisconsin Blue Book
Transportation
Aircraft bluebook, a digest of used general aviation aircraft in the US
Automobile Blue Book, an American intercity transportation guide (1901–1929)
Kelley Blue Book, an automotive appraisal guide from the company of the same name
Other uses
The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation, a US legal citation style guide
Blue Book (magazine) (1905–1975)
Blue Book (racing), a list of thoroughbred racehorses
Little Blue Books, a 20th century paperback book series
Big Blue Books, a 20th century paperback book series
The Wee Blue Book, a 2014 Scottish pro-independence publication
The WHO Blue Books, classifying tumors, from the World Health Organization
IUPAC Blue Book, common name for Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry
The Blue Book of Building and Construction, a reference work for the construction industry
Project Blue Book (TV series), a 2019 History Channel science fiction series
Blaubuch ("Blue Book"), a list of culturally important sites in eastern Germany
See also
All pages with titles containing blue book
"Blue booking", a role-playing gamer term
The Blue Pages (disambiguation)
Blue paper, technical specification whitepapers
Black Book (disambiguation)
Green Book (disambiguation)
Red Book (disambiguation)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Jepang
- Harvard Law Review
- Christian von Schneidau
- Victor Matson
- Robertson Kirtland Mygatt
- Trans Metro Pasundan
- Masahiko Metoki
- Urutan waktu peristiwa sebelum Perang Dunia II
- Tanda bagian
- Turabian
- Bluebook
- Aircraft bluebook
- Gothic bluebooks
- Diplomatic Bluebook of Japan
- Blue book
- Kelley Blue Book
- Citation signal
- ALWD Guide to Legal Citation
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Japan)
- The Indigo Book