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Current Legal Research in the Philippines

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 February 2019

Extract

Legal research traditionally has been concerned with the development or elaboration of legal doctrines, and the raw materials of such research have been statutes, administrative regulations and rulings, and court decisions. This type of research is termed as doctrinal research. Characteristically, a legal scholar undertaking doctrinal research takes one or more legal propositions as a starting point and focus of his study. Research then takes place in the law library, where the scholar tries to locate all relevant statutes, cases and all discussions of his proposition found in encyclopedias, textbooks, treatises, and legal periodicals. If the legal concept is taken from a statute, his sources would necessarily include the statute, its legislative history and, if possible, comparable statutes in other jurisdictions. He then analyzes his readings, formulates his conclusions and writes up his study in the form of a memorandum, a brief, a periodical article or a treatise.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1979 International Association of Law Libraries. 

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References

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21 Holinsteiner, M., Slum as a Way of Life: A Study of Coping Behavior in an Urban Environment (1975).Google Scholar

22 Holinsteiner, M., Think Small: A Strategy of Access for the Urban Poor. (Delivered at the Workshop on Access, Development and Distributive Justice, sponsored by the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies and the International Legal Center held in Singapore on July 31-August 2, 1976).Google Scholar

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24 In order to provide for its support, the additional amount of one percent of the filing fee imposed but in no case lower than five pesos in the case of appellate courts and the additional amount of one percent of the filing fee but in no case lower than two pesos, in the case of all other courts, including all administrative or special courts, agencies or tribunals exercising quasi-judicial functions, shall be collected for each action filed therewith. Such additional amounts shall be duly receipted for separately as part of a special fund to be known as the Legal Research Fund. Section 4, as amended by Pres. Decree No. 200 (1973).Google Scholar

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26 Dr. Rodolfo Bulatao of the U.P. Department of Sociology.Google Scholar

27 Const., Art. XV, Sec. 10.Google Scholar

28 This was done by Prof. Mamoru Tsuda, Mr. Rigoberto D. Tiglao and Ms. Edith S. Atienza.Google Scholar

29 This is undertaken by Atty. Rosa Maria J. Bautista together with Ms. Lutgarda Elvina (communication research specialist) and Prof. Amaryllis T. Torres (social psychologist).Google Scholar