output-creac-structure
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name: output-creac-structure
description: Use when structuring a legal memo or analytical response using the CREAC framework (Conclusion → Rule → Explanation → Application → Conclusion). CREAC leads with the bottom line, making it the preferred structure for partner-facing and client-facing legal memos where the reader wants the answer first. Includes MENA-jurisdiction examples (UAE non-compete, DIFC contract law) and a comparison with IRAC.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: output.CREAC-structure
category: output
priority: P1
intent: [creac, legal-memo, formatting, analytical-structure, irac]
related: [output-executive-summary-first, output-client-letter-style, output-citation-format-bluebook, output-citation-format-oscola]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"
CREAC Structure
When to use this
Use CREAC (Conclusion → Rule → Explanation → Application → Conclusion) when:
- Writing a legal memo where the reader wants the bottom line first — typically a senior lawyer, partner, or in-house client.
- Drafting a litigation memo or brief section where the argument leads with its conclusion.
- Structuring a legal AI response that analyses a specific legal question and needs a professional-quality analytical framework.
CREAC is the preferred structure for busy audiences who need the answer and then the reasoning to evaluate it. If the audience needs to understand the issue first before seeing the conclusion, use IRAC instead (see [[output-irac-structure]] if available).
CREAC works well for both common-law jurisdictions (US, UK, DIFC, ADGM) and civil-law jurisdictions (UAE, KSA, Lebanon, Egypt, France) — with adjustments to the Rule section (see Jurisdictional notes below).
The CREAC pattern
C — Conclusion (first)
State your conclusion in one sentence. This is the answer to the legal question. Do not hedge excessively — pick the most defensible conclusion and state it clearly.
The non-competition clause as drafted is likely unenforceable in its current form.
R — Rule
State the governing legal rule precisely. Include:
- The applicable statute, article, or common-law principle.
- The conditions that must be satisfied for the rule to apply.
- Any relevant threshold or limitation.
Under UAE Federal Decree-Law No. 33 of 2021 on the Regulation of Labour Relations, a non-competition clause is enforceable only if it: (1) is limited in geographic scope; (2) is limited in duration (no longer than two years); (3) is limited to activities that compete with the employer's actual business; and (4) is necessary to protect a legitimate business interest. Cabinet Decision No. 1 of 2022 emphasizes that courts apply a proportionality test.
E — Explanation
Explain how the rule has been applied — through cases, commentary, or regulatory guidance. This section gives the reader confidence that the Rule is correctly stated and that the Application is grounded in precedent or established practice.
The proportionality standard has been applied consistently by UAE labour tribunals and civil courts in disputes arising from non-compete enforcement. In recent years, multiple decisions have reduced MENA-wide non-competes to individual UAE emirates, and two-year durations for non-senior employees to twelve months. The phrase "any competitor" in a non-compete has been treated as scope-disproportionate where the employer's actual business is narrower. These decisions are not published in a comprehensive official database, but the pattern is reflected in the legal literature and in MOHRE guidance.
Do not fabricate case citations or article numbers. If the source gave specific citations, use them. If not, stay at the level of established patterns and well-known frameworks, as in the example above.
A — Application
Apply the rule to the specific facts. This is where the analysis earns its value. Map each element of the rule to the specific facts at hand:
Applying the proportionality test to the clause at issue:
Geographic scope: The clause prohibits competition "anywhere in the Middle East and North Africa." The employer's operations are concentrated in the UAE. A MENA-wide prohibition is almost certainly disproportionate for a role limited to UAE operations.
Duration: The clause imposes a 24-month restriction. For a marketing manager (not a senior executive with access to strategic trade secrets), 24 months is at the upper boundary of what courts have upheld; 12 months is the more defensible duration.
Scope of restricted activity: The clause prohibits working for "any competitor." The employer operates in digital legal services only. "Any competitor" would encompass unrelated legal technology companies, which is disproportionate.
Legitimate interest: The clause does not identify the specific confidential information or client relationships it is designed to protect. Courts and MOHRE have flagged this as a drafting weakness.
C — Conclusion (restated)
Restate the bottom line — ideally with slightly more precision than the opening conclusion, now that the reader has seen the reasoning:
The non-competition clause as drafted will likely be struck down or substantially reduced by a UAE court on proportionality grounds. We recommend reducing the geographic scope to the UAE only, the duration to 12 months, the restricted activities to digital legal services specifically, and adding a legitimate-interest recital to strengthen enforceability. Even a revised clause carries moderate enforcement risk in UAE labour proceedings; non-compete enforcement in the UAE is fact-specific and the trend favors employees.
CREAC vs IRAC
| Dimension | CREAC | IRAC |
|---|---|---|
| Opens with | Conclusion (the answer) | Issue (the question) |
| Audience | Partner, client, busy reader who wants the answer first | Professor, student, or reader who needs to understand the question before the answer |
| Use cases | Client memos, partner-facing analysis, legal AI responses | Academic papers, some US judicial opinions, first-year law school exams |
| Reader efficiency | Higher — reader can stop reading after C + R if they trust the analysis | Lower — reader must work through to the end to get the conclusion |
For a legal AI product, CREAC is almost always the right default. Lawyers are busy; they want the answer first.
Jurisdictional notes
Civil-law jurisdictions (UAE, KSA, Lebanon, Egypt, France)
In the Rule section for civil-law jurisdictions:
- Cite the applicable code and article (e.g.,
UAE Federal Decree-Law No. 33/2021, Art. 10). - The rule is usually statutory (codified), not judge-made common law.
- Judicial decisions are influential but not strictly binding (no doctrine of stare decisis).
- In the Explanation section, describe the pattern of court interpretation rather than citing specific binding precedents.
Common-law jurisdictions (DIFC, ADGM, UK, US)
In the Rule section for common-law jurisdictions:
- Cite the applicable statute (if any) and/or the leading case(s).
- The rule may be entirely judge-made (common law).
- Judicial precedent is binding within the hierarchy; cite the highest applicable court.
- In the Explanation section, cite and distinguish specific cases.
Hybrid jurisdictions (DIFC/ADGM alongside UAE)
A document may need to analyse both the UAE onshore law (civil law) and the DIFC/ADGM law (English common law) — for example, in a dispute where jurisdiction is unclear. Apply CREAC separately to each legal system, then compare:
Under UAE federal law (CREAC above), the clause is likely unenforceable.
Under DIFC Contract Law (which applies if the parties chose DIFC jurisdiction), the analysis differs: [second CREAC].
Formatting rules
- Each CREAC section has a visible label (C, R, E, A, C) or a heading (
Conclusion,Rule,Explanation,Application,Conclusion). - In a formal memo, each section is a paragraph or set of paragraphs — not a bullet list.
- In a legal AI chat response, bullet points within the Application section are acceptable for clarity.
- Do not compress the Explanation section when the rule is contested or non-obvious — the reader needs to trust the rule before the application matters.
Related skills
- [[output-executive-summary-first]] — BLUF summary that often precedes a CREAC memo
- [[output-client-letter-style]] — uses CREAC structure for the analysis body of client letters
- [[output-citation-format-bluebook]] — citation format for US CREAC memos
- [[output-citation-format-oscola]] — citation format for UK/DIFC CREAC memos