Federal Law Harvard University
This is a well-organized outline/checklist for a course in Federal Courts, which used the famous Hart and Wechsler Federal Courts textbook.
The outline is organized by topic, which is particularly helpful in an examination setting -- it makes it very easy to apply to an issue spotter. And it contains helpful charts on complicated issues, such as Younger abstention, Habeas review, and Sovereign Immunity -- issues that will almost definitely be on any Fed Courts exam.
Excellent case summaries (including facts, judgements, and relevant quotes).
Brimming with academic commentary–including summaries of the major articles.
Written by the top 1% of students and often the top 0.1%. Drastically improve your chance of a first.
Quality, not quantity. Our founder, an Oxford law graduate, compared over ten thousand note sets to find the best ones created in the last decade. We've filtered out the crap.
86% of customers are repeat customers. People can't get enough of our notes.
Concise yet comprehensive notes–save tens of hours of tedium.
Money back guarantee if the notes do not match description. Partial money back if core topics are missing.
Established company–in business since early 2010 and trusted by hundreds of thousands of students.
Completely anonymous. We never tell authors or anyone else who bought notes.
“The best place to start your readings as you can build a basic infrastructure out of them, rather than blindly dive into pages and pages.” Student, University of Oxford
“I have found the Oxbridge notes to be a really effective aid to my revision, they were thorough, up to date and relevant to my subjects, and were the main contributing factors to my exam success, very powerful tool.” Student, University of Manchester
“No unnecessary information... Oxbridge Notes cut to the chase and are more than sufficient to do well in exams.” University of Southampton, Singapore
Ambitious and intelligent students
choose Oxbridge Notes.
©2024 Oxbridge Notes. All right reserved.