"This report provides an overview of federal statutes in their various forms, as well as basic
guidance for congressional staff interested in researching statutes. When a bill becomes a law, the
newly enacted statute may amend or repeal earlier statutes or it may create a new or
“freestanding” law. Either way, these new statutes are first printed individually as “slip laws” and
numbered by order of passage as either public laws, or less frequently, private laws. Slip laws are
later aggregated and published chronologically in volumes known as the United States Statutes at
Large (Statutes at Large). Statutes of a general and permanent nature are then incorporated into
the United States Code (U.S. Code), which arranges the statutes by subject matter into 54 titles
and five appendices.
Statutes may be updated and published as amended public laws. As the statutes that underlie the
U.S. Code are revised, superseded, or repealed, the provisions of the U.S. Code are also updated
to reflect these changes. In these instances, the authoritative language remains the enacting
statute, or the “base law.” However, some titles of the U.S. Code have been passed into “positive
law,” meaning the law exists as it does in the U.S. Code and the title itself is the authoritative
language. In these instances, it is the U.S. Code sections that are revised, superseded, or repealed,
as the underlying statutes have all been revoked..."
Federal statutes
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