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Contract Law: Principles and Context

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Contract Law: Principles and Context
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Andrew Stewart
By (author) Warren Swain
By (author) Karen Fairweather
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:598
Dimensions(mm): Height 246,Width 174
ISBN/Barcode 9781107687486
ClassificationsDewey:346.94022
Audience
Tertiary Education (US: College)
Professional & Vocational

Publishing Details

Publisher Cambridge University Press
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publication Date 21 June 2019
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Contract Law: Principles and Context presents the development of contract law through a considered selection of cases that are both authoritative and used as factual examples to explain the law. The text introduces readers to the nature and range of contracts, the process for making a contract, rights and duties, adjustments to contracts, vitiating factors and unfair conduct, ending contracts, and remedies and restitution. The text considers the historical development of contracts through case law and legislation, then takes the reader to particular issues with contracts as they might arise in real life and navigates a legal pathway through them. Written in a clear and engaging style, Contract Law provides a fresh, topical and accessible account of the Australian law of contract, and is an invaluable resource for contract law students and practitioners.

Author Biography

Andrew Stewart is the John Bray Professor of Law at the University of Adelaide and works as a consultant with the national law firm Piper Alderman. His research areas are employment law, contract law and intellectual property. He has published extensively in these areas, with some of his sole or co-authored works including Stewart's Guide to Employment Law (2008), Creighton & Stewart's Labour Law (6th edition, 2016), Intellectual Property in Australia (2nd edition, 1997) and Independent Contractors: A Practical Guide (2013). Andrew Stewart is a fellow of the Australian Academy of Law, an Editor of the Australian Journal of Labour Law and co-director of the Adelaide Law School's research group on Work and Employment Regulation. Warren Swain is Professor of Law and Deputy Dean in the Faculty of Law at the University of Auckland. He has previously published The Law of Contract 1670-1870 (Cambridge, 2015) as part of the Cambridge Studies in English Legal History series, and is currently writing a monograph on the history of the law of contract in Australia and New Zealand between 1788 and 2000. He edited a collection on contract law teaching, Reimagining Contract Law Pedagogy with David Campbell (2019). He has published very widely on contract, tort, restitution and intellectual history in a number of jurisdictions. He is one of the world's leading historians of private law. Karen Fairweather is a Lecturer in the Faculty of Law at the University of Auckland. Her main areas of interest are contract law, consumer law and financial services law. Her publications include three edited collections Private Law and Power (2016), Private Law in the 21st Century (2017) and Credit, Consumers and the Law (2018). She was a Prince of Wales Scholar of Gray's Inn and has previously taught at Durham University, the University of Queensland and the University of Adelaide.

Reviews

'The definitions are crisp, short and to fresh law students, a lifeline in giddying seas. This exemplifies the book's approach. The authors have resisted temptation: Contract Law: Principles and Context is largely free from qualifications, unnecessary details and hesitant explanation. The book may not be the first choice for scholars, but it is a decisive and impressively clear introduction to the Australian law of contract.' Wayne Jocic, Melbourne Law School