This collection of essays makes an important contribution to debate
about the structure underlying private law and the relationships
between its different branches. The contributors, including leading
private law scholars from Australia, England and Canada, provide
valuable insights by looking beyond the traditional categories and
accepted structure of the law of obligations. This book covers
three topics. The first is concerned with classification and the
law of remedies. The chapters on this topic deal with both the
classification of remedies themselves and with remedial issues that
cross classificatory boundaries within the law of obligations. The
chapters on the second topic reconsider some of the boundaries
drawn by judges and scholars within the law of obligations. The
third topic deals with the relationship between obligations and
property. The chapters in this book offer illuminating new
perspectives on fundamental issues in the law of obligations.
Together, they provide a thought-provoking reconsideration of
connections and boundaries in private law.
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