Tutorials
Tutorial: build your first research file
Search for comparable decisions, select useful sources and create a focused source library.
Before you start
Begin with one research question. A good first question is narrow enough to search, but broad enough to find several potentially comparable decisions.
- Use issue terms such as investigation quality, reasonable adjustments, whistleblowing detriment or remedy.
- Avoid entering a full legal argument into search.
- Keep names and unnecessary sensitive facts out of exploratory queries.
Walkthrough
This tutorial creates a reusable research file from search results. The file should contain a small, deliberate source set.
- 1Open Decisions.
- 2Enter a broad issue phrase and run the search.
- 3Open a promising result to inspect source metadata, extracted summary and official source links.
- 4Return to the results and select decisions that deserve closer review.
- 5Choose Save to Research File.
- 6Create a new file or add to an existing file.
- 7Open the file and remove weak or irrelevant decisions.
A research file is not a merits assessment. It is a curated source set for review.
Good file hygiene
Prefer a smaller set of relevant decisions over a broad collection. Include supportive, adverse and distinguishable decisions where they clarify the range of tribunal reasoning.