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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Irit Samet (Reader in Private Law, The Dickson Poon School of Law, Reader in Private Law, The Dickson Poon School of Law, King's College London)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 16.40cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 24.20cm Weight: 0.524kg ISBN: 9780198766773ISBN 10: 0198766777 Pages: 236 Publication Date: 13 December 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1: Equity's Own Room 2: Proprietary Estoppel: On the Conscionability and Efficiency of Pre-contractual Negotiations 3: Fiduciary Law as Equity's Child 4: On Clean, Soiled, and Spattered Hands 5: Conclusion Appendix: On Moral Truths and How Judges Find ThemReviewsSamet's book is excellent. It deserves to be widely read. Developing an interpretive theory of equity is no easy task, recognizing just how far equitable jurisdiction reaches across substantive fields, how variegated are its progeny, and how wide are the differences in doctrine and institutional culture that characterize equity traditions around the world. Samet proves more than equal to the challenge, and her book should serve as a source of inspiration for equity scholars in years to come. * Paul B. Miller, Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies * Equity: Conscience goes to Market is a wonderful book, one that deeply enriches our understanding of Equity. * Dennis Klimchuk, Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies * Professor Samet offers a distinctive account of what equity is and how it works. She shows a thorough grasp of equitable doctrine over many different areas, from contract law to fiduciary law to equitable defenses, and over jurisdictions throughout the common law world. She has a penchant for fairly developing counter-arguments; her work is refreshingly free from straw men. The writing is elegant and clear, and the metaphors sometimes brilliant. The learning is manifest and lightly worn. * Samuel L. Bray, Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies * Samet's book is excellent. It deserves to be widely read. Developing an interpretive theory of equity is no easy task, recognizing just how far equitable jurisdiction reaches across substantive fields, how variegated are its progeny, and how wide are the differences in doctrine and institutional culture that characterize equity traditions around the world. Samet proves more than equal to the challenge, and her book should serve as a source of inspiration for equity scholars in years to come. * Paul B. Miller, Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies * Equity: Conscience goes to Market is a wonderful book, one that deeply enriches our understanding of Equity. * Dennis Klimchuk, Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies * Professor Samet offers a distinctive account of what equity is and how it works. She shows a thorough grasp of equitable doctrine over many different areas, from contract law to fiduciary law to equitable defenses, and over jurisdictions throughout the common law world. She has a penchant for fairly developing counter-arguments; her work is refreshingly free from straw men. The writing is elegant and clear, and the metaphors sometimes brilliant. The learning is manifest and lightly worn. * Samuel L. Bray, Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies * Samet's book provides a novel theoretical account of just how conscience might work to secure law's virtue as law, its correspondence with morality. At the same time philosophical, doctrinal and lyrical, this book offers a fresh take on what it means for equity to be organized around the idea of conscience. * Professor Larissa Katz, Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies * Irit Samet's Equity develops a novel and philosophically rich interpretation of the body of law originating in the English Court of Chancery ... known as 'Equity'. * Manish Oza, University of Toronto Law Journal * Irit Samet revitalises the 'pro-equity' and 'pro-conscience' sides of these debates. In doing so, she stimulates thought about both 'conscience' and the 'market', and relationships between them, opening avenues for critically assessing Equity's role in societies that have common law systems. * R. Madden, Social & Legal Studies * Samet's book provides a novel theoretical account of just how conscience might work to secure law's virtue as law, its correspondence with morality. At the same time philosophical, doctrinal and lyrical, this book offers a fresh take on what it means for equity to be organized around the idea of conscience. * Professor Larissa Katz, Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies * Professor Samet offers a distinctive account of what equity is and how it works. She shows a thorough grasp of equitable doctrine over many different areas, from contract law to fiduciary law to equitable defenses, and over jurisdictions throughout the common law world. She has a penchant for fairly developing counter-arguments; her work is refreshingly free from straw men. The writing is elegant and clear, and the metaphors sometimes brilliant. The learning is manifest and lightly worn. * Samuel L. Bray, Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies * Equity: Conscience goes to Market is a wonderful book, one that deeply enriches our understanding of Equity. * Dennis Klimchuk, Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies * Samet's book is excellent. It deserves to be widely read. Developing an interpretive theory of equity is no easy task, recognizing just how far equitable jurisdiction reaches across substantive fields, how variegated are its progeny, and how wide are the differences in doctrine and institutional culture that characterize equity traditions around the world. Samet proves more than equal to the challenge, and her book should serve as a source of inspiration for equity scholars in years to come. * Paul B. Miller, Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies * Author InformationIrit Samet is a reader in private law at The Dickson Poon School of Law, King's College London, where she teaches property, equity and trusts, and the theory of property. She read law and philosophy in Israel, and completed her doctorate at the University of Oxford. Her main research interests lie in the areas of equity, property law, theory of private law, and ethics. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |