Peter Chubb wrote:
Hi,
        This is a bit off-topic for this list, but does anyone know of
a LaTeX style to allow formatting of legal documents -- basicly I need
numbered paragraphs, sub paragraphs etc, and a way to cross reference
them.

Peter C

\begin{quote} Using Camel, citations are referred to in a way similar to that used in `standard BibTeX', but with a number of significant enhancements; citation tags can be used to generate subdivided bibliographies, separate bibliographies for each subdivision of a larger work are supported, as are in-footnote cross-referenced citations, bibliographies indexed to the pages where citations to the relevant work occur, and much else. This is also the only supported LaTeX2e bibliography style that supports legal citation styles (using the law.dtx module). The package also provides genuinely helpful error messages and an extremely simple syntax for adding details like page numbers and the like to citation tags.

To use Camel, you will need to fetch camel.dtx and its extractor,
camel.ins, and law.dtx with its extractor law.ins.  You will also

law.dtx:
The Law module for the Camel bibliography
package and \BibTeX{} attempts to implement fully automated typesetting
of citations in the so-called Blue Book style used in
the publication of legal materials.  This
demanding style requires context sensitive
in-footnote cross-referencing
between citations.
\end{quote}

Hopefully this might help you.

--
Mike Lake
Caver, Linux enthusiast and interested in anything technical.

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