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Books > Law > Laws of other jurisdictions & general law > Civil law (general works)
The South African Law of Persons provides law students with a thorough understanding of the principles of the law of persons.
In a concise and comprehensive manner, the publication includes discussion of the implications of the constitutional principles of the law of persons.
This book introduces students to the distinct legal traditions that make up the South African legal system.
The fourth edition of Principles of Evidence strikes a balance
between the theory of the law of evidence and its practical
application. This edition continues to assess the impact of the
Constitution on the traditional Anglo-South African law of
evidence, especially with regards to the admissibility of
unconstitutionally obtained evidence. It further discusses the
statutory provisions regulating diverse matters such as sexual
history evidence and the admissibility of electronic evidence.
This book includes a practical analysis of statutes that impact on civil procedure and relevant case law. A set of precedents can be downloaded in electronic format.
This publication was developed to provide undergraduate law students and newly qualified practitioners with an easy to follow guide through the intricacies of South African civil procedure in the High Court and the Magistrates' Courts. Procedures are logically set out chapter by chapter for ease of reference and understanding.
Complex procedures are set out in diagrams throughout the text and an annexure contains additional procedures and basic precedents.
The South African Law of Evidence is the authoritative and comprehensive guide to the law of evidence in South Africa, combining the received wisdom of the past with the imperatives of the 1996 Constitution, and includes more in-depth discussion of such topics as hearsay, admissions and confessions, and privilege.
Constitutional jurisprudence and extensive use of comparative international case-law and literature broaden your understanding of the theory underpinning the nature and problem of proof plus this 3rd edition is more up-to-date and comprehensive.
Peté & Hulmes Civil Procedure: A Practical Guide, Fourth Edition, offers a rigorous, clear and supportive introduction to the theory and practice of civil procedure. The text provides an in-depth comparative view of the procedures of the Magistrates Courts and High Court, and includes discussion of procedures of the Supreme Court of Appeal, Constitutional Court and Small Claims Court.
This fourth edition text is thoroughly revised and updated to address the many developments in case law, and amendments to relevant legislation, rules and forms, that have occurred since the publication of the previous edition of this work. In addition, the fourth edition text includes a new discussion of legal aid in civil matters.
Peté & Hulmes Civil Procedure: A Practical Guide is designed as a learning system that, by enabling a process of mind-mapping, supports effective mastery of the subject matter. The text orientates and guides readers through the many procedures, enabling clear understanding of how these procedures correlate and operate in practice. Various elements underpin the mind-mapping approach, including numerous diagrams that enable readers to quickly comprehend complex systems and procedures. The text offers further useful resources, such as precedents that demonstrate practical application of the subject matter and an extensive glossary of terms.
This is the definitive book on the legal and fiscal framework for
civil society organizations (CSOs) in China from earliest times to
the present day. Civil Society in China traces the ways in which
laws and regulations have shaped civil society over the 5,000 years
of China's history and looks at ways in which social and economic
history have affected the legal changes that have occurred over the
millennia.
This book provides an historical and current analysis of the legal
framework for civil society and citizen participation in China,
focusing not merely on legal analysis, but also on the ways in
which the legal framework influenced and was influenced in turn by
social and economic developments. The principal emphasis is on ways
in which the Chinese people - as opposed to high-ranking officials
or cadres -- have been able to play a part in the social and
economic development of China through the associations in which
they participate.
Civil Society in China sums up this rather complex journey through
Chinese legal, social, and political history by assessing the ways
in which social, economic, and legal system reforms in today's
China are bound to have an impact on civil society. The changes
that have occurred in China's civil society since the late 1980's
and, most especially, since the late 1990's, are nothing short of
remarkable. This volume is an essential guide for lawyers and
scholars seeking an in depth understanding of social life in China
written by one of its leading experts.
A Restatement of the English Law of Unjust Enrichment represents a
wholly novel idea within English law. Designed to enhance
understanding of the common law the Restatement comprises a set of
clear succinct rules, fully explained by a supporting commentary,
that sets out the law in England and Wales on unjust enrichment.
Written by one of the leading authorities in the area, in
collaboration with a group of senior judges, academics, and legal
practitioners, the Restatement offers a powerfully persuasive
statement of the law in this newly recognized and uncertain branch
of English law. Many lawyers and students find unjust enrichment a
particularly difficult area to master. Combining archaic
terminology with an historic failure to provide a clear conceptual
structure, the law remained obscure until its recent rapid
development in the hands of pioneering judges and academics. The
Restatement builds on the clarifications that have emerged in the
case law and academic literature to present the best interpretation
of the current state of the law. The Restatement will be accessible
to, and of great practical benefit to, students, academics, judges,
and lawyers alike as they work with this area of law. The text of
the Restatement is supported by full commentary explaining its
provisions and roots together with its application to real and
hypothetical cases. The Restatement appears as European private law
takes its first steps towards harmonization. In providing an
accessible survey of the English law, the Restatement will offer an
important reference point for the English position on unjust
enrichment in the harmonization debates. Also appearing shortly
after the United States Third Restatement on Restitution and Unjust
Enrichment, this Restatement offers an interesting contrast with
American law in this area.
A History of Civil Litigation: Political and Economic Perspectives,
by Frank J. Vandall, studies the expansion of civil liability from
1466 to 1980, and the cessation of that growth in 1980. It
evaluates the creation of tort causes of action during the period
of 1400-1980. Re-evaluation and limitation of those developments
from 1980, to the present, are specifically considered.
The unique focus of the book is first, to argue that civil justice
no longer rests on historic foundations, such as, precedent,
fairness and impartiality, but has shifted to power and influence.
Reform in the law (legislative, judicial, and regulatory) is today
driven by financial interests, not precedent, not a neutral desire
for fairness, and not to "make it better." It uses products, cases
and policies for much of its argument. These policies can be
summarized as a shift from a balanced playing field, negligence, to
one that favors injured consumers. The strict liability
foreshadowed by Judge Traynor, in Escola v. Coca Cola (1944), was
not adopted until 1962, when Traynor wrote the majority opinion in
Greenman v. Yuba Power Products for the California Supreme Court.
Second, the book examines the role of persuasive non-governmental
agencies, such as the American Law Institute, in reforming and
shaping civil justice.
Never has it been less true that we live under the rule of law.
Congress, agencies and the courts make the law, but they are driven
by those who have a large financial stake in the outcome. Today,
those with power shape the character of products liability law, at
every turn.
This is a fresh and stimulating book on new challenges for civil
justice. It brings together leading experts from across the world
to discuss relevant topics of civil justice from regional,
cross-border, international and comparative perspectives. Inter
alia, this book will focus on multinational rules and systems of
dispute resolution in the era of a global economy, while also
exploring accountability and transparency in the course of civil
justice. Transnational cooperation in cross-border insolvency,
regionalism in the process of recognition and enforcement of
foreign titles, and the application of electronic technologies in
judicial proceedings, including new types of evidence also play a
major role.Technology, the Global Economy and other New Challenges
for Civil Justice is a compact and accessible overview of new
developments in the field from across the world and written for
those with an interest in civil justice.
The Arbitration Institute of the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce has
become an important forum for international commercial arbitration,
with parties from more than 30 countries, especially Western
European countries and increasingly Russia, other Eastern European
Countries, and China. The author offers practitioners several
background chapters on commercial arbitration in Sweden and a
detailed analysis of each section of the Swedish Arbitration Act
(SAA).
This is a ready-reference handbook analyzing Swedish arbitration-
the SAA, the Rules, and cases-and also includes references and
commentary with respect to international commercial arbitration in
general. The author's intention is to help practitioners "in search
of rapid guidance regarding the interpretation of a particular
provision or who wish to solve a practical problem."
"This Third Edition of Commercial Arbitration in Sweden provides
us all with a valuable and up-to-date understanding of the Swedish
system in operation, and a comprehensive commentary on the SCC
Rules, both new and existing. World business has the means, through
this work, to see why Sweden and Stockholm are good choices for
their international arbitrations."-- ? Phillip Capper, Head of
International Arbitration, Lovells; Nash Professor of Engineering
Law, King's College, University of London; former Chairman of the
Faculty of Law, University of Oxford
This work provides an analysis of how foreign law should be pleaded and dealt with in the litigation process of another country. What weight should the trial court give to the relevant foreign law, and how should it decide what the foreign law actually is? The way foreign law is procedurally treated in court indicates to a certain extent the degree of tolerance of a legal system towards foreign ideas. The book compares how these issues are handled in different national systems, with particular focus upon civil litigation rules in the US, UK, France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Belgium.
A book series devoted to the common foundations of the European
legal systems. The Ius Commune Europaeum series includes
comparative legal studies as well as studies on the effect of
treaties within national legal systems. All areas of the law are
covered. The books are published in various European languages
under the auspices of METRO, the Institute for Transnational Legal
Research at Maastricht University. This book discusses the impact
of EU law on selected national legal systems. The authors analyse
how the civil procedure system of their country has reacted to
increasing Europeanisation and influence of EU law. They identify
significant changes and disseminate the reasons for particular
developments and the further implications of EU law on the civil
procedure.Europe is in a period of increasing Europeanisation of
civil procedure. Procedural elements of EU law are based on
decentralised enforcement, leaving enforcement and procedural
issues to the Member States. Consequently, there is vast amount of
EU case law that is relevant for national procedural law. The
supremacy of EU law and, inter alia, the requirements of
effectiveness and equivalence may be relevant for several topics of
national civil procedural law, for example ex officio application
of EU law, enforcement, insolvency proceedings, evidence, etc. Both
EU legislation and doctrinal changes in EU case law touch upon
various topics of the procedural law of the Member States. In a
concluding chapter, a more comprehensive comparison between the
countries represented in the book is made. Which doctrines, which
pieces of legislation or features in legislation pose problems for
national civil procedure? Are some legal systems or topics more
prone to integrate European rules, and are others more resistant to
changes? This book displays the Europeanisation of national civil
procedure law and helps to understand this development from the
perspective of Member States.
The American legal system is experiencing a period of extreme
stress, if not crisis, as it seems to be losing its legitimacy with
at least some segments of its constituency. Nowhere is this
legitimacy deficit more apparent than in a portion of the African
American community in the U.S., as incidents of police killing
black suspects - whether legally justified or not - have become
almost routine. However, this legitimacy deficit has largely been
documented through anecdotal evidence and a steady drumbeat of
journalistic reports, not rigorous scientific research. This book
offers an all-inclusive account of how and why African Americans
differ in their willingness to ascribe legitimacy to legal
institutions, as well as in their willingness to accept the policy
decisions those institutions promulgate. Based on two
nationally-representative samples of African Americans, this book
ties together four dominant theories of public opinion: Legitimacy
Theory, Social Identity Theory, theories of adulthood political
socialization and learning through experience, and information
processing theories. The findings reveal a gaping chasm in legal
legitimacy between black and white Americans. More importantly,
black people themselves differ in their perceptions of legal
legitimacy. Group identities and experiences with legal authorities
play a crucial role in shaping whether and how black people extend
legitimacy to the legal institutions that so much affect them. This
book is one of the most comprehensive analyses produced to date of
legal legitimacy within the American black community, with many
surprising and counter-intuitive results.
With increased international trade transactions and a corresponding
increase in disputes arising from those transactions, the
application of the doctrine of Forum Non Conveniens - the
discretionary power of a court to decline jurisdiction based on the
convenience of the parties and the interests of justice - has
become extremely relevant when determining which country's court
should preside over a controversy involving nationals of different
countries. Forum Non Conveniens: History, Global Practice, and
Future Under the Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements
provides an in-depth analysis of the common law doctrine of Forum
Non Conveniens as it has evolved in the four major common law
countries (UK, US, Canada, and Australia), and looks at the
similarities and differences of the doctrine among those four
countries. It compares Forum Non Conveniens to the more rigid
analogous doctrine of Lis Alibi Pendens found in civil law
countries, which requires automatic deference to the court where a
dispute is first filed and explains current initiatives for
coordinating jurisdictional issues between the common law and civil
law systems, the most important of which is the 2005 Hague
Convention on Choice of Court Agreements. The authors explain how
the Hague Convention provides a rational approach to the confluence
of common law and civil law doctrines and how its application to
international transactions is likely to temper judicial application
of the doctrine of Forum Non Conveniens and provides greater
predictability with respect to enforcement of private party choice
of court agreements.
Forum Non Conveniens: History, Global Practice, and Future Under
the Hague Convention on Choiceof Court Agreements is the only book
to provide a complete explanation of Forum Non Conveniens in the
context of global litigation, making it a very important resource
and reference work.
At a time of unprecedented growth in arbitrations between investors
and States over energy resources, International Energy Investment
Law: The Pursuit of Stability examines and assesses the variety of
contract- and treaty-based instruments in commercial and
international law that strive to protect the respective interests
of investors and States in the international energy industry. It
covers most forms of energy, especially oil and gas, and considers
issues arising from energy network operation including transit. It
pays particular attention to their practical impact through an
analysis of their enforcement by arbitration tribunals and bodies,
such as ICSID, the ICC and the LCIA. The book also examines growing
challenges presented by environmental and human rights concerns to
the stability of long-term agreements.
Investors in the international energy industry have long sought to
secure guarantees from host States to mitigate the risk of
unilateral revision of the deal at a future date. In recent years
the traditional method of securing such guarantees has been
supplemented by an unprecedented growth of international investment
law in the form of BITs, MITs and other treaty-based instruments.
Many States have also introduced guarantees into their domestic
legislation. This 'multi-tier' regime of stability has
fundamentally altered the legal framework for energy investors and
host States and offers extensive scope for international
arbitration in the event of disputes. It is a system that is
currently being tested in a number of high-value commercial
disputes as a result of a wave of unilateral State action, most
evidently in Latin America and East Europe. The protections for
investors are being tested as arbitrators develop new notions of
'legitimate expectations' and give content to 'fair and equitable
treatment', while mapping out more precisely the duties which
investors have to host States. This book examines critically the
interaction between contract and treaty forms of stability in the
new multi-tier setting, including two highly detailed regional case
studies of Latin America and East Europe. In its concluding
section, it looks forward to new challenges arising from climate
change, human rights and environmental issues.
'A clear, accurate and extraordinary concise guide to the major
doctrines of private law and current thought about what they mean.
- James Gordley, Tulane University School of Law Elgar Advanced
Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major
fields in the social sciences and law, expertly written by the
world's leading scholars. In this Advanced Introduction, one of the
world's leading private law scholars takes the reader on an
intellectual journey through the different facets and dimensions of
the field, from the family home to Kuta Beach and from Thomas
Piketty to Nina Hagen. This concise book provides an accessible and
fresh introduction to private law, presenting the topic as a
unified whole of which the main branches - on contract, tort,
property, family and inheritance - are governed by conflicts
between individual autonomy and countervailing principles. The book
stands out as a unique account of how private law allows
individuals to optimally flourish in matters of economy, work,
leisure, family and life in general. Key features include: -
succinct yet engaging and highly informative overview of private
law, aimed at an audience of specialists and non-specialists alike
- written in a clear and engaging style - ample attention to the
policy choices behind the rules - examples from a wide range of
jurisdictions in both Europe, the UK and the US - places private
law in its larger economic and societal context - addresses the
potential and the limits of private law in dealing with global
societal challenges, such as economic inequality, the fair use of
resources and protecting future generations - considers how the
field could develop in the future. Engaging and wide-ranging, this
is an excellent introduction for students and academics new to the
field and allows practitioners to quickly master the core
principles behind private law.
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