Commercial Law Robert Bradgate 3rd Edition
Commercial Law has been designed for students taking electives in commercial law on the Legal Practice Course, and will also be useful for students taking electives in commercial law topics. It covers all the key areas of general contracts, agency and distribution arrangements, credit andsecurity, bills of exchange, competition law, intellectual property law and commercial contracts, also including specimen terms of sale and purchase.
The guide forms a bridge between the notes, exercises, and case studies produced by each institution and the 'raw material' found in practitionertexts. This enables students to develop a thorough grasp of key areas within commercial law before entering into practice. It has been fully updated in light of all recent changes in the law in order for students to have a complete understanding of current legal issues and the new edition willinclude checklists within the chapters to guide students through the essential areas of commercial law. Professor Robert Bradgate is Professor of Commercial Law at the University of Sheffield.
Before coming to Sheffield he practised as a solicitor before commencing his academic career at Nottingham Trent University. His interests cover a wide range of aspects of contract and commercial law, particularly domestic and international sales of goods and he has written widely on contract and commercial law.Fidelma White is Lecturer of Law at the University College Cork, where she lectures and writes on aspects of commercial law. She was previously a lecturer at the University of Sheffield.
Richard Whish and David Bailey’s Competition Law is the definitive textbook on this subject. The authors’ authoritative treatment of the area is matched by a lively and easy-to-follow writing style, making this book an indispensable resource for undergraduate and postgraduate law and economics students, as well as for practitioners and officials involved in competition law. Explaining the economic context within which competition law operates in the UK, EU and internationally, the authors look at the constituent parts of the law and analyze how they affect commercial phenomena. Key aspects are examined in detail, including mergers, horizontal and vertical agreements, the Abuse of Dominance, Intellectual Property and the obligations of Member States under the EC. The book also scrutinizes fundamental Acts and Articles – Competition Act 1998; Enterprise Act 2002; Articles 101 and 102 – providing readers with context, consequences and an overview of how these are applied in practice.
Online Resource Centre The Online Resource Centre that accompanies this edition of the book contains an author video podcasts, articles from the authors, useful web links, and extended versions of the tables in the text. This book is essential reading for students, practitioners and officials seeking a respected, reliable, intelligent and critical approach to competition law. Contract Law offers a unique and highly innovative approach to contract law, utilizing numerous diagrams to complement the academically rigorous text, which illuminate the subject and bring it to life.Written by a leading contract lawyer with extensive teaching experience, the book employs a lively and critical style to explain the intricacies of contract law and the questions that arise during the life of a contract. The book’s use of ‘pause for reflection’ and ‘counterpoint’ boxes also encourages students to engage with the key debates, facilitating an appreciation of the more complex tensions surrounding this essential subject.The book is accompanied by a comprehensive website to support the use of the book in teaching. Students can access the following resources: PowerPoint slides of selected diagrams with accompanying audio (voiced by the author) to show how these come together; updates; web links to key cases and legislation; guidance on answering the questions posed in the book; and two additional chapters on incapacity and illegality & public policy. Additionally, lecturers have access to a test bank, and electronic copies of the diagrams from the book. About the AuthorMindy Chen-Wishart is Reader in Contract Law in the Law Faculty at Oxford University, a Fellow of Merton College, Oxford and Professor of Law at the National University of Singapore.
Previously she was a senior lecturer at Otago University, New Zealand, and Rhodes Research Fellow at St. Hilda’s College, Oxford. This book seeks to open new lines of discussion about how Islamic law is viewed as a potential tool for programs of social transformation in contemporary Muslim society.
Commercial Law Robert Bradgate 3rd Edition Book
It does this through a critical examination of the workings of the state shari’a system as it was designed and implemented at the turn of the twenty-first century in Aceh, Indonesia. While the empirical details of these discussions are unique, this particular case presents a remarkable site for investigating the broader issue of the impact of instrumentalist, future-oriented visions of Islamic law on modern Muslim calls for the state implementation of Islamic law. In post-tsunami/post-conflict Aceh, the idea of shari’a as an exercise in social engineering was amplified through resonance with an increasingly pervasive rhetoric of ‘total reconstruction’.Based upon extensive fieldwork as well as critical readings of a wide range of archival materials, official documents, and local publications this work focuses on the institutions and actors involved with this contemporary project for the state implementation of Islamic law.
The individual chapters are structured to deal with the major components of this system to critically examine how these institutions have taken shape and how they work. It also shows how the overall system was informed not only by aspects of late twentieth-century da’wa discourses of Islamic reform, but also modern trends in sociological jurisprudence and the impact of global models of disaster relief, reconstruction, and development. All of these streams of influence have contributed significantly to shaping the ways in which the architects and agents of the state shari’a system have attempted to use Islamic legislation and legal institutions as tools to steer society in particular desired directions.
Andrew Burrows continues to provide an authoritative account of the law of restitution in the third edition of this highly-praised textbook. Fully revised and updated, this edition includes a wealth of new cases and academic thinking in addition to thorough examination of the subject as a whole.
Commercial Law Robert Bradgate 3rd Edition Free
As with previous editions, the author’s expert analysis and clarity of style will be invaluable to students and practitioners with an interest in this area of law. About the AuthorAndrew Burrows FBA, QC (hon) is Norton Rose Professor of Commercial Law at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of St. Hugh’s College. He is also a Barrister and Honorary Bencher of Middle Temple, and Honorary Director of the Oxford Law Foundation. He was formerly Law Commissioner for England and Wales 1994-1999.