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Together, the four co-authors have taught bankruptcy courses at
more than 20 very different law schools; one of them sat as a
bankruptcy judge for nine years; and all four have substantial
practice experience. Drawing on their diverse experience, they have
prepared original text, problems, and edited cases with three goals
in mind: (1) introduce students to one new bankruptcy concept at a
time, (2) show students the connection among the various concepts
and (3) give the students a sense of how these bankruptcy concepts
are utilized in both the smallest personal and largest business
bankruptcy cases.
This book combines UCC Articles 2 (sales) and 9 (secured
transaction) for either a three- or four-hour course focusing on
business sales (B2B) and commercial financing. Coverage is
transactionally arranged and integrated - back and forth between
Articles 2 and 9 - based on a recurring fact pattern of Our Bank
financing Our Store which buys goods from Our Supplier and resells
to Our Buyer[s]. The book mixes explanatory text, cases, and
problems to support a variety of teaching and learning styles. And
statutory provisions themselves are reprinted when and where they
are referenced so there is no need to hunt for them in or outside
the book. The problems include actual, recent bar examination
questions interspersed throughout the book for comprehensive
review. The book covers everything that is fundamentally important
in both sales and secured transactions in ways and means that allow
students to manage and benefit from the wide, integrated coverage.
This interactive course and companion text considers the extent to
which people with legal training, but no practice license, can use
the law, as a social and economic variable, to better manage risk
without fear of prosecution or civil liability. The dramatic
changes in the legal profession since the 2008 market crash, from
the increase in virtual law practice to the rise of DIY services to
clients' increasing demand for efficiencies, have led to a
recognition that nonlawyers have an increasingly critical role in
the delivery of legal services. The debate gets hotter each day
over what nonlawyers, people or computers, can do without running
afoul of unauthorized practice of law restrictions. Designed
especially for nonlawyer masters and international LLM programs,
these materials are also ideal for JD students in their early
studies, and include: Textbook 1 hour of instructional videos on
overview of UPL
Nickles and Epstein's Black Letter Outline on Bankruptcy and
Related Law helps law students recognize and understand the basic
principles and issues of law covered in law school courses. This
Black Letter outline can be used both as a study aid when preparing
for classes and as a review of the subject matter when studying for
an examination. Coverage includes: Extrajudicial collection devices
Judicial debt collection Fraudulent transfers Creditors with
special rights Debtor's state law remedies and the Collective
Creditor Act Commencement, conversion, and dismissal of a
bankruptcy case Stay of collection actions Property of the estate
Exemptions A Text Correlation Chart outline is cross-referenced to
the leading casebooks on creditors' rights and bankruptcy.
This casebook comprehensively covers Article 9 with a fresh,
practical, rich mixture of explanatory text, cases, and problems
supporting a variety of teaching and learning styles. Obligingly,
statutes are reprinted at almost every place in the book when and
where they are referenced. There is no need to hunt in or outside
the book for the applicable UCC or other statutory provisions.
Problems include actual, recent bar examination questions that are
interspersed throughout the book for comprehensive review. All in
all, the book covers everything basically important in secured
transactions and does so in ways and means that can easily
accommodate most teachers' interests and styles.
This interactive course and companion text considers the extent to
which people with legal training, but no practice license, can use
the law, as a social and economic variable, to better manage risk
without fear of prosecution or civil liability. The dramatic
changes in the legal profession since the 2008 market crash, from
the increase in virtual law practice to the rise of DIY services to
clients' increasing demand for efficiencies, have led to a
recognition that nonlawyers have an increasingly critical role in
the delivery of legal services. The debate gets hotter each day
over what nonlawyers, people or computers, can do without running
afoul of unauthorized practice of law restrictions. Designed
especially for nonlawyer masters and international LLM programs,
these materials are also ideal for JD students in their early
studies. The interactive course includes materials for a 1 credit
course, with resources for 700 minutes of direct faculty contact
and include: Textbook Complete syllabus with learning outcomes
Instructional videos developed by the authors Slides accompanying
all videos Online or classroom discussion forum prompts for each
chapter Self-directed and auto-graded quizzes for each chapter
Research and writing projects for each chapter Short answer
questions for each chapter New cases on unauthorized practice of
law by non-lawyers updated each semester and available online
Black Letter Outlines are designed to help a law student recognize
and understand the basic principles and issues of law covered in a
law school course. Black Letter Outlines can be used both as a
study aid when preparing for classes and as a review of the subject
matter when studying for an examination. Each Black Letter Outline
is written by experienced law school professors who are recognized
national authorities in their subject area. The Payments Law
Outline summarizes and explains the fundamental law applicable to a
broad variety of current payment systems, including checks, drafts,
credit cards, debit cards, prepaid cards, and digital currencies.
This text summarizes and explains the fundamental law applicable to
a broad variety of current payment systems. Coverage includes
issues of liability, transfer, holder in due course status, and
check collection applicable to negotiable instruments (checks,
notes, drafts) governed by UCC Articles 3 and 4, as well as letters
of credit and documents of title governed by UCC Articles 5 and 7.
The text further examines the rights, obligations, and federal
protection applicable to credit and debit cards. Finally, this
title addresses recent legal developments in regard to a variety of
electronic fund transfers, prepaid cards and digital currencies.
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