Law and opinion at the end of the twentieth century
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Bibliographic Information
Law and opinion at the end of the twentieth century
(Current legal problems, 1997 ; vol. 50)
Oxford University Press, 1997
- : pbk.
- : hbk.
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Note
"Edited by Michael Freeman on behalf of the faculty of laws university college London" -- on cover
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
: hbk. ISBN 9780198265993
Description
The fiftieth volume of the Current Legal Problems series contains the now customary selection of high quality essays by a group of outstanding scholars. To celebrate the golden anniversary of the work, contributors were each asked to take stock of developments in their particular area of expertise over the past fifty years, and to give a critical analysis of where the law now stands. It therefore contains a particularly valuable and broad-ranging set of contributions. A paperback version of this book is being published simultaneously.
Table of Contents
- The Changing Constitution in the 1990s
- English Contract Law: A Rich Past, An Uncertain Future?
- Negligence: The Search for Coherence
- Restitution: Where do we go from here?
- Property Law: Re-establishing Diversity
- Understanding Civil Justice
- Restraining the State: Principle and Judicial Review
- The Critical Condition of Criminal Law
- The Globalisation of Crime and Criminal Justice: Prospects and Problems
- The Stirring of Corporate Social Conscience: From Cakes and Ale to Community Programmes
- Family Values and Family Justice
- Industrial Relations: The Empire Strikes Back
- Roman Law in the Middle of its Third Millenium
- International Law in the Past Half Century - and the next?
- Volume
-
: pbk. ISBN 9780198267874
Description
The 50th volume of the "Current Legal Problems" series contains the now customary selection of essays by a group of scholars. To celebrate the golden anniversary of the work, contributors were each asked to take stock of developments in their particular area of expertise over the past 50 years, and to give a critical analysis of where the law now stands. It therefore contains a broad-ranging set of contributions. From this volume onwards the "Annual Review" and the "Collected Papers" will appear together in one hardback and one paperback volume.
Table of Contents
- Dawn Oliver, the changing constitution in the 1990s
- Ewan McKendrick, English contract law - a rich past, an uncertain future?
- Bob Hepple, negligence - the search for coherence
- Andrew Burrows, restitution - where do we go from here?
- Alison Clarke, property law - re-establishing diversity
- Hazel Genn, understanding civil justice
- Jeffrey Jowell, restraining the state - principle and judicial review
- Ian Dennis, the critical condition of criminal law
- David Nelken, the globalization of crime and criminal justice - prospects and problems
- Ben Pettet, the stirring of corporate social conscience - from cakes and ale to community programmes
- Michael Freeman, family values and family justice
- Roger Rideout, industrial relations - the empire strikes back
- Andrew Lewis, Roman law in the middle of its third millennium
- Maurice Mendelson, international law in the past half century - and the next?
by "Nielsen BookData"