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The fusion of law and equity in common law systems was a crucial
moment in the development of the modern law. Common law and equity
were historically the two principal sources of rules and remedies
in the judge-made law of England, and this bifurcated system
travelled to other countries whose legal systems were derived from
the English legal system. The division of law and equity - their
fission - was a pivotal legal development and is a feature of most
common law systems. The fusion of the common law and equity has
brought about major structural, institutional and juridical changes
within the common law tradition. In this volume, leading scholars
undertake historical, comparative, doctrinal and theoretical
analysis that aims to shed light on the ways in which law and
equity have fused, and the ways in which they have remained
distinct even in a 'post-fusion' world.
Each generation of lawyers in common law systems faces an important
question: what is the nature of equity as developed in English law
and inherited by other common law jurisdictions? While some
traditional explanations of equity remain useful - including the
understanding of equity as a system that qualifies the legal rights
people ordinarily have under judge-made law and under legislation -
other common explanations are unhelpful or misleading. This volume
considers a distinct and little noticed view of equity. By
examining the ways in which courts of equity have addressed a range
of practical problems regarding the administration of deliberately
created schemes for the management of others' affairs, modern
equity can be seen to have a strongly facilitative character. The
extent and limits on this characterisation of equity are explored
in chapters covering equity's attitude to administration in various
public and private settings in common law systems.
Each generation of lawyers in common law systems faces an important
question: what is the nature of equity as developed in English law
and inherited by other common law jurisdictions? While some
traditional explanations of equity remain useful - including the
understanding of equity as a system that qualifies the legal rights
people ordinarily have under judge-made law and under legislation -
other common explanations are unhelpful or misleading. This volume
considers a distinct and little noticed view of equity. By
examining the ways in which courts of equity have addressed a range
of practical problems regarding the administration of deliberately
created schemes for the management of others' affairs, modern
equity can be seen to have a strongly facilitative character. The
extent and limits on this characterisation of equity are explored
in chapters covering equity's attitude to administration in various
public and private settings in common law systems.
The fusion of law and equity in common law systems was a crucial
moment in the development of the modern law. Common law and equity
were historically the two principal sources of rules and remedies
in the judge-made law of England, and this bifurcated system
travelled to other countries whose legal systems were derived from
the English legal system. The division of law and equity - their
fission - was a pivotal legal development and is a feature of most
common law systems. The fusion of the common law and equity has
brought about major structural, institutional and juridical changes
within the common law tradition. In this volume, leading scholars
undertake historical, comparative, doctrinal and theoretical
analysis that aims to shed light on the ways in which law and
equity have fused, and the ways in which they have remained
distinct even in a 'post-fusion' world.
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