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- How to Build A Table of Authorities in Word* - Georgetown Law
• A Table of Authorities (TOA) is a list of all of the sources cited in a legal document that notes the page numbers on which each source has been cited • To create a TOA, you must “mark” each of your citations
- Table of Authorities – The Ultimate Guide - Legal Office Guru
The first citation of any case or other authority should be the only one marked with a “long” citation (see the Gupta illustration just above for an example of that TA code); all subsequent citations to that authority must be marked with a “short” citation (like the Harris TA code shown just above) The long citation codes include all
- Create a table of authorities - Microsoft Support
To create a table of authorities, you mark citations and Microsoft Word inserts a special TA (Table of Authorities Entry) field in your document You can then search the document for the next long or short citation to mark, or you can automatically mark each subsequent occurrence of the citation
- How to Do a Table of Authorities in Word: A Step-by-Step Guide
Creating a table of authorities in Word is a handy way to organize legal documents and ensure all citations are accounted for In a nutshell, you’ll be using Word’s built-in feature to mark citations, categorize them, and then generate a table that lists them all in a neat, organized way
- MS Word for Lawyers: Table of Authorities - Tech for Lawyering . . .
A Table of Authorities (TOA) is the compilation of all legal authorities cited in your document The table contains citations by category and lists the various pages those legal authorities can be located on within the document
- Table of Authorities - Legal Writing: Tools and Tips for formatting . . .
Short Form Citations When you get to your short-form citation, the process changes slightly Once you've selected the short-form citation, you will click "Mark Citation" and then choose the proper category from the drop-down Make sure to click Mark After you mark citations, Word may automatically show you field codes and hidden text
- MAC - Creating Your Table of Authorities - How to Format an Appellate . . .
To create a TOA you "mark" your citations and Word inserts a special TA (Table of Authorities Entry) field in your document
- Creating a Table of Authorities (Microsoft Word) - WordTips (ribbon)
The table of authorities will cite the case or statute, along with the page number in the document on which the case or statute is referenced Word includes the ability to easily create a table of authorities
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