Federal Register Vol. 81, No.205, 2025

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Like Congressional legislative history, the regulatory history recorded in the Federal Register can be invaluable to researchers interested in the intent of lawmakers and the purpose of regulations. Presidential documents (Executive orders, proclamations, administrative orders, etc.)
Published by the Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), the Federal Register is the official daily publication for rules, proposed rules, and notices of Federal agencies and organizations, as well as executive orders and other presidential documents.
Regulation Identifier Numbers RINs help the public to identify and follow the progress of each regulatory action or rulemaking proceeding in the Unified Agenda, the Federal Register, and on the Reginfo.gov website. Each regulatory action retains the same RIN throughout the entire rulemaking process.
A citation to a regulation published in the Federal Register can be broken out into several components. In the following example, the complete citation is written as: Amendment to Incorporation by Reference in Safety Standard for High Chairs, 87 Fed. Reg. 42636, July 18, 2022 (to be codified at 16 CFR 1231.2).
Citing Federal Cases Generally The correct citation for federal cases has three basic parts: The name of the case; The published source (volume, reporter page number) where the case may be found; and. A parenthetical indicating the court and year of the decision.
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Citations to the Federal Register should give any commonly used name of the rule or regulation, the volume and page on which the rule or regulation begins, and the date of the rule or regulation.
The Federal Register is the chronological publication of proposed regulations, final regulations, and related materials. The Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) is a subject arrangement of regulations.

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