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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Andrew S. Gold (Bruce W. Nichols Visiting Professor of Law, Bruce W. Nichols Visiting Professor of Law, Harvard Law School; Professor of Law, DePaul University College of Law) , Paul B. Miller (Associate Professor, Associate Professor, McGill University Faculty of Law)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 17.90cm , Height: 2.90cm , Length: 25.30cm Weight: 0.944kg ISBN: 9780198701729ISBN 10: 0198701721 Pages: 448 Publication Date: 14 August 2014 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsAndrew S. Gold and Paul B. Miller: Introduction Part I. Fiduciary Relationships 1: The Hon. Justice James Edelman: The Role of Status in the Law of Obligations: Lessons for Fiduciary Duties 2: Joshua Getzler: Ascribing and Limiting Fiduciary Obligations: Understanding the Operation of Consent 3: Paul B. Miller: The Fiduciary Relationship 4: Hanoch Dagan and Sharon Hannes: Managing our Money: The Law of Financial Fiduciaries as a Private Law Institution Part II. Fiduciary Duties 5: Irit Samet: Fiduciary Loyalty as Kantian Virtue 6: Lionel D. Smith: Can We Be Obliged to Be Selfless? 7: J.E. Penner: Is Loyalty a Virtue, and Even If It Is, Does it Really Help Explain Fiduciary Liability? 8: Andrew S. Gold: The Loyalties of Fiduciary Law Part III. Economic Theory: Constructive and Critical Perspectives 9: Robert H. Sitkoff: An Economic Theory of Fiduciary Law 10: Daniel Markovits: Sharing Ex Ante and Ex Post: The Non-Contractual Basis of Fiduciary Relations 11: Richard R.W. Brooks: Knowledge in Fiduciary Relations 12: Tamar Frankel: How to Water Down Fiduciary Duties 13: Henry Smith: Why Fiduciary Law is Equitable Part IV. Fiduciary Principles in Context: Private Law 14: Michele Graziadei: Virtue and Utility: Fiduciary Law in Civil Law and Common Law Jurisdictions 15: Martin Gelter and Geneviève Helleringer: Constituency Directors and Corporate Fiduciary Duties 16: Deborah A. DeMott: The Fiduciary Character of Agency and the Interpretation of Instructions 17: Avihay Dorfman: On Trust and Transubstantiation: Mitigating the Excesses of Ownership Part V. Fiduciary Principles in Context: Public Law 18: Evan Fox-Decent: Fiduciary Authority and the Service Conception 19: Ethan J. Leib, David L. Ponet, and Michael Serota: Mapping Public Fiduciary Relationships 20: Evan J. Criddle: A Sacred Trust of Civilization: Fiduciary Foundations of International LawReviews`This edited collection brings together a number of leading scholars, one might say an all-star cast, to consider an area of law which, in recent years, has become increasingly topical. The editors are also admirably ambitious for the book, believing that it will aset the agenda for philosophical study of fiduciary law for generations to comea. Only the passage of time can vindicate that claim; but the coverage and quality of the collection go a long way to justifying such an expectation.' Daniel J Carr, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh Law Review `A deep and wide-ranging exploration of fiduciary law by leading scholars from around the world. Anyone working in private or public law who is interested in fundamental questions associated with this topic-whether doctrinal, philosophical, or pragmatic-should start with this volume.' John Goldberg, Eli Goldston Professor of Law, Harvard Law School `This collection, made up of essays from eminent private law thinkers, is a landmark in the field. It both launches fiduciary theory as a serious academic project and constitutes perhaps the most important contribution to that project.' Matthew Harding, Professor of Law, Melbourne Law School `With the renewed interest in private law theory in the last decade, fiduciary obligations have emerged as an especially fertile area of study. As these obligations appear in so many areas of law - from corporate law to family law to the law of trusts - it can be it difficult to get a view of the whole. The chapters in Gold and Miller's volume provide just that. Individually, the contributions advance our understanding of fiduciary law in multiple directions. Taken together, they provide an excellent introduction to fiduciary law as a whole, to the various scholarly approaches to fiduciary obligations, and to the contemporary debates about their design, purpose and justification.' Gregory Klass, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center This edited collection brings together a number of leading scholars, one might say an all-star cast, to consider an area of law which, in recent years, has become increasingly topical. The editors are also admirably ambitious for the book, believing that it will aset the agenda for philosophical study of fiduciary law for generations to comea. Only the passage of time can vindicate that claim; but the coverage and quality of the collection go a long way to justifying such an expectation. * Daniel J Carr, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh Law Review * This edited collection brings together a number of leading scholars, one might say an all-star cast, to consider an area of law which, in recent years, has become increasingly topical. The editors are also admirably ambitious for the book, believing that it will aset the agenda for philosophical study of fiduciary law for generations to comea. Only the passage of time can vindicate that claim; but the coverage and quality of the collection go a long way to justifying such an expectation. Daniel J Carr, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh Law Review Author InformationAndrew Gold is a Professor at the DePaul University College of Law. His recent scholarship has focused on fiduciary theory, contract theory, civil recourse theory, and corrective justice. He has been a Visiting Scholar at Harvard Law School, and an HLA Hart Visiting Fellow at the University of Oxford. He is also a co-founder of the North American Workshop on Private Law Theory. Paul B. Miller is Assistant Professor at the McGill University Faculty of Law. He is a philosopher of private law concentrating on fiduciary law, trusts, corporate law, and the law of unincorporated organizations. He formerly served as a law clerk to the Hon. Justice Ian Binnie of the Supreme Court of Canada and taught law at Queen's University. He is also a co-founder of the North American Workshop on Private Law Theory. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |