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Rhetorical Resources
What is Rhetoric
Finding Your Way Around This Section
What is Rhetoric?
The Five Canons of Rhetoric
1. What Your Arguments Are
2. The Structure of Your Argument
- Guidance on the Introduction
- Guidance on the Statement of Facts
- Tips Relating to Legal Arguments
- Theoretically Favourable Evidence - EIC and Re-examination
- Evidence Likely to Damage Your Case - Cross Examination
- The Closing Speech or Peroration
3. How You Say It - A Rough Rhetorical Guide
4. How You Remember It
5. How You Deliver It
Advocacy Training Resources
Practicing and Learning From Opening Speeches
Practising and Learning from Statements of Fact
Further Examples of Curran's Speeches
Historically Interesting Speeches and Trials
Erskine - Speeches and Trials
Scottish Trials of Note
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The Five Canons of Rhetoric
The Structure of Your Argument
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Guidance on the introduction
Guidance on the statement of facts (narration)
Tips relating to legal arguments
Theoretically favourable evidence (EIC and re-examination)
Historical hints and tips re witness handling and EIC
Modern perspectives on examination in chief
The ten commandments of examination in chief
Actual examples of EIC
Evidence likely to damage your case - cross examination
The Rules of XX
Detailed guidance on XX
Famous examples of XX
Legal orators views on cross
The closing speech or peroration