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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Nicholas SeddonPublisher: Federation Press Imprint: Federation Press Edition: 5th Revised edition Weight: 1.032kg ISBN: 9781862879133ISBN 10: 1862879133 Pages: 544 Publication Date: 24 April 2013 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Tertiary & Higher Education 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 ContentsThe Uses of Contract by Governments IntroductionThe Application of Contract Law to Government ContractsThe Government's Use of ContractThe Erosion of Remedies and AccountabilityFree Trade Agreements and Government Procurement The Government's Power to Contract The CommonwealthThe States and TerritoriesStatutory Corporations and Local GovernmentThe Consequences of Lack of Power Contract Formation Intention to Create Legal RelationsStatutory AgreementsAuthority to Contract on Behalf of GovernmentAuthority to Contract and Statutory CorporationsFailure to Appropriate Funds Government Privileges and Immunities Government Bodies as Legal EntitiesThe Different Meanings of The Crown Statutory Bodies and the Shield of the CrownPrivate Bodies and the Shield of the CrownGovernment Privileges and Immunities Executive Necessity, the Rule Against Fettering and Legislative Overriding of Contract Contract and Future Government ActionThe Doctrine of Executive NecessityThe Primacy of LegislationThe Rule against Fettering Future Executive ActionThe Rule against Fettering Legislative ActionLegislative Overriding of an Existing ContractThe Effect on the ContractGovernment Effectiveness and Estoppel The Government and Competition and Consumer Legislation The Competition and Consumer SchemeThe Legislation and GovernmentCarrying on a BusinessThe Consequences of ExemptionProportionate liability Tenders IntroductionContractual Analysis of TendersThe Pre-Award PeriodEstoppelMisleading or Negligent ConductConfidentialityRestitutionAdministrative Law ChallengesAccess to Information Administrative Law Remedies IntroductionThe Availability of Administrative Law RemediesThe Grounds for ReviewThe OmbudsmanAccess to Information IndexReviewsThis is a lawyers' textbook. The subject-matter is arcane, yet vital in practice. The explanations, and ordering of material, are clear. Mr Seddon is direct. He shares his views. If you doubt a view he has shared, check the footnote. This is a scholarly work. The ease of reading belies the serious intent. Read full review... - David Marks, Hearsay, July 2013, 63 Reviews of previous editions:An excellent reference for those in the business supplying goods and services to government, both in terms of being up to date on the latest changes in law, and for anyone seeking to contrust a practical checklist on any part of the contracting process. - David Parker, Law Institute Journal of Victoria, November 2009 Dr Seddon has put together in the one readable volume the legal principles and case law (almost all of which was handed down in the last 25 years) to produce a mini-encyclopaedia on the subject. For those working in the area, it is well worth acquiring. - (2005) 79 Australian Law Journal This third edition indicates just how much the whole process of government contracting has developed over the nine years since the first edition appeared. - Public Administration Today, July-Oct 2005 The third edition of this book provides a comprehensive coverage of issues that arise when contracting with all levels of government in Australia. The risks specific to government contracts that are covered include the power of government to contract; Crown privileges and immunities; and the ability of governments to override contracts through legislation. The author also deals extensively with governmental tenders and administrative law remedies. This edition introduces new issues, including how the Australia-US Free Trade Agreement will affect Australian government procurement; political interference in the government contracting process; and the distinction between statutory licences and government contracts. ... The book is clearly written and easy to read. It will be invaluable to any practitioner engaged in negotiating contracts with any level of government. The author highlights areas of the law of contracting with government that remain uncertain, which should assist practitioners in assessing specific risks and drafting contracts accordingly. - Law Institute Journal (Vic), Vol 79(4), April 2005 This work, an intensive account of a specialist area of contract law, is in its third edition in less than nine years. That is in itself a considerable recommendation about the quality of this book and its usefulness. It is written by Dr Nicholas Seddon, a co-author of Cheshire and Fifoot's Australian edition. It was written for a specialist Australian legal audience but I expect it to be of interest to public servants and lawyers in other jurisdictions. It is now a work of some 400 pages. It may well turn out to be of greater interest to lawyers who practice in other areas of contract and commercial law than they might initially expect. The law relating to government contracts (to use a contemporary analogy) lies between the grinding tectonic plates of contract, administrative law and complex legislation. The result of these tensions is a sense of very rapid state of development of legal ideas in these areas. ... Quite apart from general revision and accounts of recent case law, the third edition covers areas absent from the previous editions including the Free Trade Agreement, the role of political interference in government decision making, the distinction between a statutory licence and a contract and an expanded discussion of when legalisation does or does not bind government entities. This text is an authoritative account of an important area of contract is unlikely to be surpassed for many years. It deals with an area of the law that is likely to increase rapidly in importance over the next decade and would be a valuable addition to the library of any practitioner specialising in commercial law. - (2005) 26 Qld Lawyer In the construction industry, government's role and influence are more and more akin to those of a commercial enterprise. Accordingly, ... Mr Seddon's second edition is both topical and valuable. Tendering is the commercial threshold of construction projects yet it is ill-understood and often badly done. Mr Seddon's deep insight into both the problems and important lessons to be learnt will be especially appreciated. ... - Building & Construction Law Journal, February 2000 ...it is a very user-friendly text ... illustrating once again that a brilliant mosaic of our law is extremely interesting when the spotlight is put upon a little section of it. - Justice Michael Kirby, Australian Law Journal ...the explanations are admirably lucid and concise, and overall the book provides an excellent, accessible and well structured account of the relevant principles of law. - Professor Sue Arrowsmith The 5th edition of this worthy volume incorporates new material, including commentary on the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 and the Australian Consumer Law which replaced the Trade Practices Act. Seddon considers the more philosophical issues surrounding public contracting as a government activity. The application of the rules of contract law to government contracts raises many questions. Seddon's work is the go-to volume in the area of government contracts, and this latest edition continues that fine tradition. Read full review... - Jane Grace, Ethos, ACT Law Society, March 2015 This is a lawyers' textbook. The subject-matter is arcane, yet vital in practice. The explanations, and ordering of material, are clear. Mr Seddon is direct. He shares his views. If you doubt a view he has shared, check the footnote. This is a scholarly work. The ease of reading belies the serious intent. Read full review... - David Marks, Hearsay, July 2013, 63 Reviews of previous editions:An excellent reference for those in the business supplying goods and services to government, both in terms of being up to date on the latest changes in law, and for anyone seeking to contrust a practical checklist on any part of the contracting process. - David Parker, Law Institute Journal of Victoria, November 2009 Dr Seddon has put together in the one readable volume the legal principles and case law (almost all of which was handed down in the last 25 years) to produce a mini-encyclopaedia on the subject. For those working in the area, it is well worth acquiring. - (2005) 79 Australian Law Journal This third edition indicates just how much the whole process of government contracting has developed over the nine years since the first edition appeared. - Public Administration Today, July-Oct 2005 The third edition of this book provides a comprehensive coverage of issues that arise when contracting with all levels of government in Australia. The risks specific to government contracts that are covered include the power of government to contract; Crown privileges and immunities; and the ability of governments to override contracts through legislation. The author also deals extensively with governmental tenders and administrative law remedies. This edition introduces new issues, including how the Australia-US Free Trade Agreement will affect Australian government procurement; political interference in the government contracting process; and the distinction between statutory licences and government contracts. ... The book is clearly written and easy to read. It will be invaluable to any practitioner engaged in negotiating contracts with any level of government. The author highlights areas of the law of contracting with government that remain uncertain, which should assist practitioners in assessing specific risks and drafting contracts accordingly. - Law Institute Journal (Vic), Vol 79(4), April 2005 This work, an intensive account of a specialist area of contract law, is in its third edition in less than nine years. That is in itself a considerable recommendation about the quality of this book and its usefulness. It is written by Dr Nicholas Seddon, a co-author of Cheshire and Fifoot's Australian edition. It was written for a specialist Australian legal audience but I expect it to be of interest to public servants and lawyers in other jurisdictions. It is now a work of some 400 pages. It may well turn out to be of greater interest to lawyers who practice in other areas of contract and commercial law than they might initially expect. The law relating to government contracts (to use a contemporary analogy) lies between the grinding tectonic plates of contract, administrative law and complex legislation. The result of these tensions is a sense of very rapid state of development of legal ideas in these areas. ... Quite apart from general revision and accounts of recent case law, the third edition covers areas absent from the previous editions including the Free Trade Agreement, the role of political interference in government decision making, the distinction between a statutory licence and a contract and an expanded discussion of when legalisation does or does not bind government entities. This text is an authoritative account of an important area of contract is unlikely to be surpassed for many years. It deals with an area of the law that is likely to increase rapidly in importance over the next decade and would be a valuable addition to the library of any practitioner specialising in commercial law. - (2005) 26 Qld Lawyer In the construction industry, government's role and influence are more and more akin to those of a commercial enterprise. Accordingly, ... Mr Seddon's second edition is both topical and valuable. Tendering is the commercial threshold of construction projects yet it is ill-understood and often badly done. Mr Seddon's deep insight into both the problems and important lessons to be learnt will be especially appreciated. ... - Building & Construction Law Journal, February 2000 ...it is a very user-friendly text ... illustrating once again that a brilliant mosaic of our law is extremely interesting when the spotlight is put upon a little section of it. - Justice Michael Kirby, Australian Law Journal ...the explanations are admirably lucid and concise, and overall the book provides an excellent, accessible and well structured account of the relevant principles of law. - Professor Sue Arrowsmith Reviews of previous editions:An excellent reference for those in the business supplying goods and services to government, both in terms of being up to date on the latest changes in law, and for anyone seeking to contrust a practical checklist on any part of the contracting process. - David Parker, Law Institute Journal of Victoria, November 2009 Dr Seddon has put together in the one readable volume the legal principles and case law (almost all of which was handed down in the last 25 years) to produce a mini-encyclopaedia on the subject. For those working in the area, it is well worth acquiring. - (2005) 79 Australian Law Journal This third edition indicates just how much the whole process of government contracting has developed over the nine years since the first edition appeared. - Public Administration Today, July-Oct 2005 The third edition of this book provides a comprehensive coverage of issues that arise when contracting with all levels of government in Australia. The risks specific to government contracts that are covered include the power of government to contract; Crown privileges and immunities; and the ability of governments to override contracts through legislation. The author also deals extensively with governmental tenders and administrative law remedies. This edition introduces new issues, including how the Australia-US Free Trade Agreement will affect Australian government procurement; political interference in the government contracting process; and the distinction between statutory licences and government contracts. ... The book is clearly written and easy to read. It will be invaluable to any practitioner engaged in negotiating contracts with any level of government. The author highlights areas of the law of contracting with government that remain uncertain, which should assist practitioners in assessing specific risks and drafting contracts accordingly. - Law Institute Journal (Vic), Vol 79(4), April 2005 This work, an intensive account of a specialist area of contract law, is in its third edition in less than nine years. That is in itself a considerable recommendation about the quality of this book and its usefulness. It is written by Dr Nicholas Seddon, a co-author of Cheshire and Fifoot's Australian edition. It was written for a specialist Australian legal audience but I expect it to be of interest to public servants and lawyers in other jurisdictions. It is now a work of some 400 pages. It may well turn out to be of greater interest to lawyers who practice in other areas of contract and commercial law than they might initially expect. The law relating to government contracts (to use a contemporary analogy) lies between the grinding tectonic plates of contract, administrative law and complex legislation. The result of these tensions is a sense of very rapid state of development of legal ideas in these areas. ... Quite apart from general revision and accounts of recent case law, the third edition covers areas absent from the previous editions including the Free Trade Agreement, the role of political interference in government decision making, the distinction between a statutory licence and a contract and an expanded discussion of when legalisation does or does not bind government entities. This text is an authoritative account of an important area of contract is unlikely to be surpassed for many years. It deals with an area of the law that is likely to increase rapidly in importance over the next decade and would be a valuable addition to the library of any practitioner specialising in commercial law. - (2005) 26 Qld Lawyer In the construction industry, government's role and influence are more and more akin to those of a commercial enterprise. Accordingly, ... Mr Seddon's second edition is both topical and valuable. Tendering is the commercial threshold of construction projects yet it is ill-understood and often badly done. Mr Seddon's deep insight into both the problems and important lessons to be learnt will be especially appreciated. ... - Building & Construction Law Journal, February 2000 ...it is a very user-friendly text ... illustrating once again that a brilliant mosaic of our law is extremely interesting when the spotlight is put upon a little section of it. - Justice Michael Kirby, Australian Law Journal ...the explanations are admirably lucid and concise, and overall the book provides an excellent, accessible and well structured account of the relevant principles of law. - Professor Sue Arrowsmith Author InformationDr Nick Seddon is recognised as a leading authority in contract law. As special counsel in Ashurst Australia he advises Australian Government agencies and the private sector in common law and commercial law matters, including major contracts, major acquisitions, and the application of the Competition and Consumer Act. Nick also advises on the operation of legislation affecting government and private sector entities. He provides legal awareness training to both the public and private sectors. In 2004, Nick was appointed adjunct professor in The Australian National University College of Law. Nick is the author of the leading text, Government Contracts: Federal, State and Local, as well as co-author of Cheshire & Fifoot's Law of Contract. As a consultant to the Laws of Australia project, he contributed to volumes on the general principles of the law of contract. He was editor of the Federal Law Review from 1997-2000. Nick was a former academic and teacher at the Australian National University. He has served as a part-time Commissioner on the Australian Law Reform Commission, and in 2000 was the legal panel member for the Bracks government's Audit Review of Government Contracts. In 2012 he was named the Best Lawyers' 2012 Canberra Government Lawyer of the Year. 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