Congressional Research Service (CRS) is a research agency of Congress and writes reports at Congress' request. These short reports (usually 10-40 pages long) cover recent topics of concern. This week brings us reports on presidential records, arms control, the motor vehicle industry, and more. Although these reports are in the public domain, there is no central database available to the public. To get a copy of a CRS report you can request it from your Senator or Representative. This list is compiled from CRS reports discovered by Secrecy News:
Interested in historical CRS reports? If you are here at the Boulder campus, check out the LexisNexis Congressional database, which has reports back to 1916.
Not on campus, but still want access to additional reports? The library has a guide linking to various additional sources of CRS reports.
- Presidential Records: Issues for the 111th Congress
- F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) Program: Background, Status, and Issues
- Strategic Arms Control After START: Issues and Options
- Herring v. United States: Extension of the Good-Faith Exception to the Exclusionary Rule in Fourth Amendment Cases
- U.S. Motor Vehicle Industry: Federal Financial Assistance and Restructuring
- India-U.S. Relations
- Compulsory DNA Collection: A Fourth Amendment Analysis
Interested in historical CRS reports? If you are here at the Boulder campus, check out the LexisNexis Congressional database, which has reports back to 1916.
Not on campus, but still want access to additional reports? The library has a guide linking to various additional sources of CRS reports.
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