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Updated and expanded for the second edition, this volume provides
attorneys, academics and students with a detailed yet accessible
overview of the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the
International Sale of Goods (CISG). Adopted by more than eighty
nations and governing a significant portion of international sales,
the CISG regulates contract formation, performance, risk of loss,
conformity to contractual requirements and remedies for breach.
This volume explains the CISG doctrines and their ambiguities, and
appraises the extent to which the doctrines reduce transaction
costs for commercial actors. Its topic-based approach will be ideal
for those pursuing academic analysis or subject-specific research.
This collection, first published in 2000, brings together essays by
some of the most prominent scholars currently writing in commercial
law theory. The essays address the foundations of efficiency
analysis as the dominant theoretical paradigm in contemporary
corporate and commercial law scholarship. Some of the questions
addressed in the volume are: What are the historical roots of
efficiency analysis in contract, sales, and corporate law? Is moral
theory irrelevant to efficiency analysis in these areas; if
relevant, are morality and efficiency compatible? Even if
efficiency is otherwise reasonable as a normative goal in corporate
and commercial law, does the complexity of efficiency make it
practical to administer in adjudication? What is the best way of
pursuing efficiency in corporate and commercial law? The volume
reflects the most exciting work being done in contemporary legal
theory. It will be of interest to professionals and students in law
and philosophy of law.
This collection brings together new essays by some of the most prominent scholars currently writing in commercial law theory. The essays address the foundations of efficiency analysis as the dominant theoretical paradigm in contemporary corporate and commercial law scholarship. The volume addresses such questions as: is moral theory irrelevant to efficiency analysis in these areas; if relevant, are morality and efficiency compatible? What is the best way of pursuing efficiency in corporate and commercial law? The volume reflects the most exciting work being done in contemporary legal theory. It will be of interest to professionals and students in law and philosophy of law.
Updated and expanded for the second edition, this volume provides
attorneys, academics and students with a detailed yet accessible
overview of the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the
International Sale of Goods (CISG). Adopted by more than eighty
nations and governing a significant portion of international sales,
the CISG regulates contract formation, performance, risk of loss,
conformity to contractual requirements and remedies for breach.
This volume explains the CISG doctrines and their ambiguities, and
appraises the extent to which the doctrines reduce transaction
costs for commercial actors. Its topic-based approach will be ideal
for those pursuing academic analysis or subject-specific research.
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