As I prepare to teach Business Associations in the spring after taking a few semesters off from that task, I am rooting around for the best statutory resource book for my students. I am still inclined to assign a book for variety of reasons, despite the additional cost for students. (But feel free to offer arguments in the comments to the contrary.)
I had been successfully using the Corporations and Other Business Associations: Selected Statutes, Rules, and Forms book edited by Chuck O’Kelley, Bob Thompson, and (recently added) Dorothy Lund since 2000. But a few years ago, the editors made the decision to substitute the Delaware Revised Uniform Limited Partnership Act for the Revised Uniform Limited Partnership Act (RULPA). RULPA is the law in Tennessee, and it conforms to the structure of the other uniform acts I teach (Revised Uniform Partnership Act and the Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act). Because most of my students will practice in Tennessee and sinceI spend little time on limited partnership law, RULPA is a better choice for me in my teaching. (But again, feel free to push back on that choice on my part.)
So, what do you do? Do you used a paperback statutory resource? If so, which one, and why? If not, what do you do to ensure that students know the statutes and how to navigate them? I have tried several ways to accomplish those purposes in the past. But I have concluded that, for my teaching, having the statutes handy in a book is optimal.