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Table of Contents

Use of this guide assumes some familiarity with legal research. For assistance, ask at the Reference Counter.

UNITED STATES CODE : US Docs Ref Y 1.2/5:

The U.S. Code, cited as "U.S.C.," is a multi-volume publication, issued every six years (with the 2000 edition in progress). The Code contains statutes, or public laws, currently in force; it is updated in annual bound supplements.

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Online, searchable versions of the U.S.C. are available from a variety of sources: GPO AccessElectronic Version (GPO), , FDsysOffice of the Law Revision Counsel (House of Representatives), Cornell University Law School, The U.S.C. is also available in LexisNexis Academic. The Electronic Version and the Cornell University Law School site are easy to navigate and browse.

STATUTES AT LARGE: US Docs Ref GS 4.111: and US Docs Ref AE 2.111:

Shelved consecutively. Drew library owns volumes from the 38th Congress onward (incomplete).

Statutes at Large are a record of all private laws and public laws, Concurrent Resolutions and Proclamations passed by Congress and signed by the President since 1789. (Private laws effect specific individuals, or groups of individuals.) Volumes are arranged chronologically and laws are identified with the Congress that passed them (or amended them). Each session of Congress (generally two) is assigned its own volume number for Statutes at Large. Each volume number is normally issued in multiple parts. Each part indicates sequential page numbers: Vol. 113, Part 3, pp. 1545-2183 covers laws, etc passed by the 106th Congress, 1st session. The Contents pages at the beginning of each part of every volume indicates which laws, etc. are contained within each bound issue, by reference to a page number. Statutes at Large provides a great deal of information about a particular law, including legislative history.

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Prior to being published in bound volumes, public and private laws are issued individually as slip laws. The library currently receives hard copies of slip laws. GPO Access FDsys provides access to the recently passed laws, within a few days of enactment, as well as archived laws from the 103rd Congress onward. Searching by public law number, or by keyword, is available. Boolean operators can be used, but must be capitalized. The adjacent operator must also be capitalized: ADJ. Quotation marks ("") are needed for phrases. The slip laws, archived from the 104th Congress onward. The first seventeen volumes of the Statutes at Large, covering the laws of the first 43 Congresses, 1789-1875 can be accessed at the Library of Congress American Memory Project - Statutes at Large.  

Context and background information to laws passed by Congress through a topic or subject is possible from LexisNexis Congressional possible from Proquest Congressional (Drew only, accessed from Resources by Title) and Thomas (from the Library of Congress) The several reference tools located in US Docs Ref section provide background and aid access to laws from 1789 onward, through subject/keyword or through Act name (CIS, Monthly Catalog, Cumulative Subject or Title Index to the Monthly Catalog, etc.). University of Berkeley Library provides helpful guides for Congressional Research.

CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS : US Docs Ref AE 2.106/3:

The Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), updated and issued annually, contains regulations issued by Federal executive agencies. These 200-odd paperback volumes are arranged by 50 Titles. However, unlike the U.S. Code (U.S.C.), these Titles are arranged by agency. A list of all agencies and corresponding Titles appears in the back of every CFR volume. Like the U.S.C., Titles in the CFR appear as Arabic numerals. CFR titles and U.S.C. Titles do not necessarily match.

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Access to regulations by subject or topic, by U.S.C. or Statutes at Large citation is possible with the CRF Index and Finding Aids volume of the CFR, the final volume of the series. However, as with the U.S.C., preliminary research in secondary sources such as Lexis-Nexis is helpful for proper terminology particularly for subject or topic searching, and in the case of the CFR, for identifying the appropriate Federal agency involved in enforcing or overseeing the regulation. The CFR is also available online at GPO Access. Boolean operators can be used, but must be capitalized. The adjacent operator must also be capitalized: ADJ. Quotation marks ("") are needed for phrases. The CFR is also searchable through LexisNexis. Click on Legal Research and then Federal Regulations. Drop down the Source List menu and opt for Code of Federal Regulations. Tips provided on the search page aid searching. FDsys

LSA: List of CFR Sections Affected updates changes to Federal regulations. A record of affected sections appears in each volume of the current CFR. The LSA is also available online from GPO Access. Detailed information about Federal regulations that appear in the CFR, as well as updates to the annual CFR, appear in the Federal Register.

FEDERAL REGISTER: in US Docs microfiche cabinets under Federal Register

The Drew library owns microfiche from 1973 onward.

Federal agency rules, proposed rules, and notices as well as executive orders and other presidential documents are published in the Federal Register, issued daily Monday through Friday. Online  Online versions of the Federal Register  are are available from GPO FDsys Access from Volume 59 (1994), with searchable fields available from 1995 onward. LexisNexis . LexisNexis Academic has the full text of the FR from July 1, 1980 onward.1936 onward (Drew only, accessed from Resources by Title).

Federal Register citations appear as follows: 41 FR Wiki MarkupSearching the [Federal Register|http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html] online is by subject, agency, table of contents by issue date, regulation part number, by *List of CRF Part Affected*, by page number and by citation. Combinations of the above are also possible (e.g., "department of commerce" AND encryption). Again, Boolean operators, and the ADJ connector, *must* be capitalized. Quotation marks ("") are needed for phrases. For searching tips please consult the [helpful hints|http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/tips.html] section. *Federal Register* citations appear as follows: *{_}41 FR 56,623-56,624 \ [Dec. 29, 1976\]_*. 41 indicates the volume, and 56,523-56,524 the page numbers, followed by the publication date.An excellent site for accessing and understanding Federal law and legislation is the Law Librarian's Society of Washington DC.