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Practising Citations

In his interview, it is revealed of Stevenson’s work to achieve justice in the American age of racial discrimination such as the “Equal Justice initiative”.

Nerz's paper provides a factual explanation of what the show is about and applies the characteristic of legal language to the show. For example, the paper uses transcripts from the T.V show and records the common phrases of legal jargon, which are mostly Latin phrases such as “subpoena” and the French word, “plaintiff”.

It also gives insight on popular transnational trends such as most people in countries like Greece comprising of “83%” Americans featured as police on television.

Sauerberg also draws on how the contrast between civil and common law system affects the genre element of suspense {Cite book | last = Sauerberg | first = Lars Ole | author-link = Lars Ole Sauerberg | year = 2016 | title = The Legal Thriller from Gardner to Grisham See you in Court! | publisher = London: Palgrave Macmillan UK | location = UK | isbn = 9781137407290 | pages = 13-37}}

The news reporter, Shapiro states the impact the novel has had on school’s learning, the millions of sales it has made and interviews professors such as the “Professor of Southern Literature at the University of Charleston”.

Answers to Module 7 Question
Image of a novel for novel section of article such as Presumed Innocent by Scott Turrow. Copyright license.