U.S. Legal System Directory: Purpose and Scope
The U.S. Legal System Directory on this domain is a structured reference index covering the federal bankruptcy framework established under Title 11 of the United States Code. It maps the statutes, procedural rules, court structures, debtor and creditor rights, and policy foundations that govern insolvency proceedings across all 94 federal judicial districts. The directory exists to give researchers, legal professionals, journalists, academics, and informed members of the public a single organized entry point into a body of law that spans constitutional authority, federal statute, and administrative oversight.
How to use this resource
The directory is organized by subject cluster rather than alphabetical order. Each cluster groups related legal concepts so that a reader tracking a specific procedural question — such as the mechanics of an automatic stay in bankruptcy law — can identify adjacent topics without reconstructing the conceptual map from scratch.
Entries function as reference nodes, not as legal advice. Each linked page states the governing statute, identifies the relevant federal rule or administrative code, and describes the mechanism the law creates. Readers applying this material to a specific legal situation are expected to consult licensed practitioners, because bankruptcy proceedings are adjudicated under the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure (28 U.S.C. § 2075) and local court rules that vary by district.
The directory is best navigated in one of three ways:
- By chapter type — Readers focused on a specific bankruptcy chapter (7, 9, 11, 12, 13, or 15) can enter through the chapter-specific framework pages, which cross-reference the eligibility rules, procedural stages, and discharge standards unique to each.
- By legal role — Readers focused on a participant's position — debtor, secured creditor, trustee, creditor committee — can enter through role-specific pages that describe statutory authorities and obligations.
- By procedural phase — Readers tracing the lifecycle of a case from petition filing through plan confirmation or discharge can follow the procedural index, which sequences topics chronologically.
The U.S. Bankruptcy Court System structure page serves as the structural anchor for understanding how subject-matter jurisdiction is allocated between Article III district courts and Article I bankruptcy courts under 28 U.S.C. § 157.
Standards for inclusion
Entries are included only when the underlying topic is grounded in one or more of the following primary sources:
- Title 11, United States Code — the Bankruptcy Code itself, as amended through the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (BAPCPA) and subsequent legislation
- Title 28, United States Code — governing jurisdiction, venue, and the United States Trustee Program
- Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure — the 9000-series rules promulgated under Supreme Court authority pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2075
- Official Forms — standardized forms prescribed by the Judicial Conference of the United States
- Published opinions of the U.S. Supreme Court and Circuit Courts of Appeals — where those opinions establish binding interpretive standards, such as the constitutional limits addressed in Stern v. Marshall, 564 U.S. 462 (2011), covered in detail at Stern v. Marshall: Constitutional Limits on Bankruptcy Courts
- Federal agency publications — including U.S. Trustee Program guidelines issued under 28 U.S.C. § 586 and means-test figures published by the U.S. Department of Justice
Topics derived solely from secondary commentary, law review speculation, or unreported trial court decisions are excluded. The threshold for inclusion is that the topic must reflect an operative rule, right, or procedure that a practitioner or court would apply in a live proceeding.
How the directory is maintained
Directory content is reviewed against the primary sources listed above. When Congress amends Title 11, when the Judicial Conference issues new Official Forms, or when the U.S. Trustee Program publishes updated median income figures used in the bankruptcy means test, affected pages are updated to reflect the change before the prior version is retired.
The U.S. Trustee Program, a component of the U.S. Department of Justice operating under 28 U.S.C. §§ 581–589a, administers and supervises bankruptcy cases across 21 regions covering 93 of the 94 federal judicial districts. (The District of Alabama and the District of North Carolina operate under a separate Bankruptcy Administrator program supervised by the federal judiciary rather than the Executive Branch.) Where that program issues guidance — including required credit counseling and debtor education provider lists under 11 U.S.C. § 111 — the directory reflects the published guidance rather than independently derived interpretations.
Circuit splits — areas where two or more federal circuits apply conflicting interpretations of the same statute — are flagged within relevant pages rather than resolved by editorial preference. The directory does not take positions on unsettled questions of law.
What the directory does not cover
The following categories fall outside the scope of this directory:
- State insolvency proceedings — Assignment for the benefit of creditors, state court receiverships, and state-law composition agreements are not governed by Title 11 and are not indexed here. Federal vs. state jurisdiction in bankruptcy explains the constitutional boundary between federal bankruptcy law and state insolvency remedies.
- Non-U.S. insolvency regimes — Foreign main proceedings and foreign non-main proceedings recognized under Chapter 15 are covered only from the U.S. procedural perspective under 11 U.S.C. §§ 1501–1532. The substantive law of foreign jurisdictions is not analyzed.
- Tax law beyond discharge intersection — The directory covers tax debt discharge in bankruptcy as a bankruptcy-law question under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(1), but it does not cover Internal Revenue Code compliance, tax return preparation, or IRS collection procedures outside the bankruptcy context.
- Consumer financial regulation beyond bankruptcy intersection — The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act is addressed only at the point where it intersects with the automatic stay and discharge injunction. The broader regulatory framework administered by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau under 12 U.S.C. § 5481 et seq. is outside scope.
- Legal advice or case-specific guidance — The directory describes what the law provides. It does not assess how any legal standard applies to a particular debtor, creditor, or asset. The bankruptcy attorney roles and professional obligations page describes the professional framework within which licensed counsel provides that analysis.