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Contents of Commercial Contracts: Terms Affecting Freedoms: Hart Studies in Private Law

Editat de Paul S. Davies, Magda Raczynska
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 iul 2020
Freedom of contract is a great strength of English law: indeed it is a key reason why English law is often the law of choice. But the terms of commercial contracts often restrict freedom of action. This book considers such terms. Leading commentators take stock of recent developments such as increased reliance on good faith/discretion and the rise of smart contracts. Insodoing, they make original contributions to ongoing debates concerning the limits to parties' freedom of contract. This important subject will interest drafters of commercial contracts keen to ensure that contracts are clear and enforceable; litigators disputing the meaning, scope and validity of terms; and academics interested in the purpose and nature of the exercises involved.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781509930494
ISBN-10: 1509930493
Pagini: 488
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.85 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Seria Hart Studies in Private Law

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Leading commentators explore the impact of terms in commercial contracts that restrict freedom to act

Notă biografică

Paul S Davies is Professor of Law and Magda Raczynska is Associate Professor of Law, both at University College London.

Cuprins

1. Freedom of Contract and Terms Affecting Freedoms Magda Raczynska and Paul S Davies2. Binding Our Future Selves Robert Stevens3. Anti-Oral Variation Clauses: Rock-Solid or Rocky? Andrew Burrows4. Controlling Contractual Interpretation Richard Calnan5. Good Faiths and Contract Terms Magda Raczynska6. Excluding Good Faith and Restricting Discretion Paul S Davies7. The New Override of Bans on Assignment of Receivables Hugh Beale8. The Boundaries of a Borrower's Freedom to Act: Negative Covenants in Loan Agreements Louise Gullifer and Graham Penn9. 'Ethical Clauses' in Global Value Chain Contracts: Exploring the Limits of Freedom of Contract Lucinda Miller10. Smart Contracts Sarah Green and Adam Sanitt11. Disproportionate Penalties in Commercial Contracts William Day12. Opting for 'Documentary Fundamentalism': Respecting Party Choice for Entire Agreement and Non-Reliance ClausesJonathan Morgan13. Planning for Failure: Contract Design, Ineffective Bargains and Restitution Niamh Connolly14. 'All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace'? The Inevitable Conflict between Contract Law and Free Speech in Cyberspace Nicholas J McBride15. Private Law and Public Concerns: Non-Disclosure Agreements in English Contract Law Catharine MacMillan16. Professional Ethics and NDAs: Contracts as Lies and Abuse? Richard Moorhead17. Choice of Court and Choice of Law Agreements: Freedom of Freedom of Contract Alex Mills18. Illegality in English Arbitration Law after Patel v Mirza Ugljesa Grusic and Manuel Penades Fons19. The Reform of Insurance Warranties: Looking Beyond the Past John Lowry and Rod Edmunds20. The Right to Delivery of Goods under Contracts of Carriage Melis Özdel21. The Contents of Commercial Contracts: Terms Affecting Freedoms - A Response Jacqueline Cook

Recenzii

This is a book teeming with insights . Practical, insightful and entertaining, this book will stimulate further discussion of its diverse subject matter. The editors have collated these thought-provoking chapters, each of which invites the reader to revisit and explore long-held assumptions about fundamental principles of contract law. Its value lies not only its application to the issues of contract law in the modern day but so too the challenges that the future will inevitably bring. Who could ask for more?
The contributions on their own are stimulating but, as a body of work, provide a most interesting analysis of current issues facing, not just contract law scholars but also, and importantly, solicitors who draft and deal with contracts on a day-to-day basis . the breadth of topics included in the book is a great strength, providing a snapshot of some of the most topical and hotly debated areas of contract law at this time.
The book is interesting, relevant and essential to anyone interested in contract law. It will become an indispensable reading to judges, legal scholars and practitioners interested in finding out the extent to which contracts work as devices promoting commitment.
I very much recommend this book to anyone interested in the study, theory, practice and application of contract law.