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OverviewCompiled in honour of Bernard Rudden, this is a book of essays in comparative law centering on the contribution which comparative analysis can make to the core subjects of private law, namely property and obligations. The essays are contributed by leading academics from all over the world, all of whom owe an intellectual debt to the honorand. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Peter Birks (, All Souls College) , Arianna Pretto (, Brasenose College)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 16.30cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 24.20cm Weight: 0.632kg ISBN: 9780199258567ISBN 10: 0199258562 Pages: 314 Publication Date: 14 November 2002 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational 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 ContentsPart I: Fundamentals and Method 1: Hans Baade: Stare Decisis in Civil-Law Countries: The Last Bastion 2: Pierre Legrand: Alterity: About Rules, For Example 3: Geoffrey Samuel: Comparative Law and the Legal Mind Part II: Property Theory 4: Jim Harris: Property - Rights in Rem or Wealth? 5: Arianna Pretto: Primary Rights and Rights in Rem Part III: Property Specifics 6: John Bell: Property and Legal Culture in France 7: Roy Goode: Are Intangible Assets Fungible? 8: James Gordley: The Origin of Riparian Rights 9: Michele Graziadei: Tuttifrutti Part IV: Obligations 10: Peter Birks: Comparative Unjust Enrichment 11: John Cartwright: Defects of Consent and Security of Contract: French and English Law Compared 12: Mark Freedland: Ius cogens, ius dispositivum and the Law of Personal Work Contracts Part V: Form and Formality 13: Gerhard Dannemann: Formation of Contracts on the Internet 14: Simon Whittaker: The Reformulation of Contractual Formality Part VI: Reform 15: Xavier Blanc-Jouvan: Les Limites d'un Droit Europeen du Travail 16: Ugo Mattei: Should Europe Codify Trust? 17: Vladislav Moudrykh: Insurance Law in Post-Soviet Russia 18: Reinhard Zimmermann: Modernising the German Law of ObligationsReviewsReview from other book by this author: The list of contributors ... resembles the First XI of a virtual law faculty: there is a combination of leading Professors ... and rising stars ... Each chapter is well written and reflects the structured approach taken in the whole work. ... English Private Law would be a welcome addition to any law library. New Law Journal, 3 Aug 2001 This book is a veritable tour de force on the subject. Sweeping in its scope, it offers illuminating accounts of various individual components of English private law, whilst at the same time providing a much-needed overview of how each of those components fits to form a coherent whole ... This elegantly produced book ... is ideally suited to facilitate that process of change. It will be welcomed by lawyers all over the world. Commonwealth Lawyer, April 2001 This is an important book which will fill the gap for practitioners between Halsbury's Laws of England and a nutshell guide, and which legal libraries should find in great demand from solicitors, barristers and foreign lawyers. Marion Simmons QC, 3/4 South Square This magisterial work is an invaluable route map to English private law. It provides a unique, structured and principled overview of English law. It will be an indispensable tool in the hands of judges. And since the judges hold the votes practitioners will not want to lag behind. The Rt Hon Lord Steyn This is, as far as scope and status are concerned, an institutional work in the great tradition ultimately based on Gaius' Institutes. It fills one of the most lamentable gaps in the modern European law library; and it will do more than any other to make English private law accessible to continental lawyers. Prof. Dr. Reinhard Zimmermann ...this is a Festschrift of the first order. That it is concise means that it is affordable; and, being affordable, no law library in Scotland can do without it. The Edinburgh Law Review The editors have succeeded, however, in producing a volume which, to paraphrase one of the contributors, is wide-ranging without slipping into the esoteric; an attribute which characterised Rudden's own work. To that this writer can add, 'enjoyable'. Ross G Anderson, The Edinburgh Law Review, Vol. 10:1 Author InformationPeter Birks is Regius Professor of Civil Law at All Souls College, Oxford Arrianna Pretto, is Fellow of Brasenose College Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |