A collection of materials that can be used with any Contract Law casebook. The editors provide a thoughtful and helpful introduction to the materials. This edition also includes materials concerning electronic contracting, such as excerpts from the text and comments of the Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act, portions of the text and comments of the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act, and portions of the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Communications Act.
Totally unique in both ambition and realization, this book belongs on the shelf of every reader with some reason to understand the basics of the American law of contracts.
Representing an unprecedented joint effort from top scholars in the field, this volume collects original contributions to examine the fundamental role of 'fault' in contract law. Is it immoral to breach a contract?
The Ninth Edition continues the approach of earlier editions in emphasizing rich, full-bodied versions of the principal cases, a functionalist approach to the problems of contract law, and analytical notes on such issues as the differences ...
Featuring selections from a new generation of contracts scholars including Steven J. Burton, Nathan B. Oman, Margaret Radin, and more, along with additional content by Alan Schwartz and Robert E. Scott, this text offers a diversity of ...
The central theme of this book is that an economic framework--incorporating such concepts as information asymmetry, moral hazard, and adaptation to changed circumstances--is appropriate for contract interpretation, analyzing contract ...
This collection brings together some of the main contributions to an important area of this work, the economics of contract law.
It provides a set of default rules and if the parties do not like them, they can change them. Rethinking Contract Law and Contract Design explores various long-standing contract doc
This book provides invaluable assistance to all those facing coursework assignments or examinations in contract law.
Lawyers representing parties with interests in Japan will welcome this very useful guide, and academics and researchers will appreciate its value in the study of comparative contract law.
This book explains the common law doctrine through an examination of the historical development of the doctrine in English law.