
Exploring Private Law
Cambridge University Press
Published on 22. August 2013
Book
Paperback/Softback
526 pages
978-1-107-61746-9 (ISBN)
Description
Inspired by recent debate, the purpose of this collection of essays on private law doctrines, remedies and methods is to celebrate and illustrate the contribution that both 'top-down' and 'bottom-up' methods of reasoning make to the development of private law. The contributors explore a variety of topical subjects, including judicial approaches to 'top-down' and 'bottom-up' methods; teaching trusts law; the protection of privacy in private law; the development of the law of unjust enrichment; the private law consequences of theft; equity's jurisdiction to relieve against forfeiture; the nature of fiduciary relationships and obligations; the duties of trustees; compensation and disgorgement remedies; partial rescission; the role of unconscionability in proprietary estoppel; and the nature of registered title to land.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
2 Line drawings, unspecified
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 31 mm
Weight
845 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-107-61746-9 (9781107617469)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Elise Bant | Matthew Harding
Exploring Private Law
Book
09/2010
Cambridge University Press
€91.76
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Elise Bant | Matthew Harding
Exploring Private Law
E-Book
09/2010
1st Edition
Cambridge University Press
€38.49
Available for download
Persons
Elise Bant is an Associate Professor in the Melbourne Law School at the University of Melbourne and an Honorary Fellow of the University of Western Australia. Matthew Harding is a Senior Lecturer in the Melbourne Law School at the University of Melbourne.
Content
Introduction Elise Bant and Matthew Harding; Part I. Method: 1. Do top-down and bottom-up reasoning ever meet? Keith Mason; 2. Internationalisation or isolation: the Australian cul de sac? The case of contract law Paul Finn; 3. The Australian Law of Restitution: has the High Court lost its way? Andrew Burrows; 4. Privacy and private law: developing the common law of Australia Michael Tilbury; 5. Towards legal pragmatism: breach of confidence and the right to privacy Megan Richardson; 6. Teaching trust law in the twenty-first century Tang Hang Wu; Part II. Unjust Enrichment: 7. The impact of legal culture on the law of unjustified enrichment: the role of reasons Helen Scott and Daniel Visser; 8. Natural obligations and unjust enrichment Mitchell McInnes; 9. Causality and abstraction in the common law Birke Haecker; 10. Trust and theft Robert Chambers; Part III. Equity and Trusts: 11. What is left of equity's relief against forfeiture? Sarah Worthington; 12. Contracts, fiduciaries and the primacy of the deal Anthony Duggan; 13. Four fiduciary puzzles James Edelman; 14. Good faith: what does it mean for fiduciaries and what does it tell us about them? Richard Nolan and Matthew Conaglen; 15. Trustees' duties to provide information Lusina Ho; Part IV. Remedies: 16. The measurement of compensation claims against trustees and fiduciaries Lionel Smith; 17. Substitutability and disgorgement damages in contract Katy Barnett; 18. Unconscionability and proprietary estoppel remedies Andrew Robertson; 19. Partial rescission: disentangling the seedlings but not transplanting them Peter Watts; 20. Of horses and carts: theories of indefeasibility and category errors in the Torrens system Kelvin Low.