Property law is concerned with a wider variety of rights, obligations and interests than most other areas of law, and can prove daunting to those studying the subject for the first time. Commonwealth Caribbean Property Law sets out in a clear and concise manner the central principles of the law of real property in the region, in order to guide students through this often complex core subject area. In this new edition, the book has been fully revised and updated to include important new case law from the various Caribbean jurisdictions and an expanded appendix of working documents. With comprehensive coverage of the main topics studied by undergraduates, such as Leases, Co-Ownership, Restrictive Covenants, Easements, Mortgages, and Land Sale, this textbook is essential reading for LLB students in Caribbean universities and students on CAPE Law courses. The extensive coverage of land law from a Caribbean perspective and analysis of the substantive laws of several jurisdictions will also make this text an invaluable reference tool for practitioners.
This is designed to be a basic text for students of real property law in the Commonwealth Caribbean.
Essential reading for undergraduate law students in the Caribbean, this text will also prove useful to those studying for the certificate of proficiency in the practice of law in the Commonwealth Caribbean, while the footnote references to ...
Commonwealth Caribbean Intellectual Property Law provides a detailed comparative analysis, first examining the international aspects of the law that form the basis for domestic law, and looking at the theoretical basis for IP law in the ...
ICC Cricket World Cup 2007 Act, 2006 of Trinidad and Tobago, section 25(1)–(3). The Nairobi Treaty on the Protection of the Olympic Symbol (adopted at Nairobi on 26 September 1981). Phillip Johnson, Ambush Marketing: A Practical Guide ...
This work is now well established as the leading text on tort law in the region, and this third edition incorporates the most recent developments in law and legal thinking.
29 See Gibson v Gibson GY 1971 HC 28, in which Bollers C.J. noted that the common law did not allot a married woman to possess any property independently of her husband since they were regarded as one person.
This work is now well established as the leading text on tort law in the region, and this fifth edition has been updated throughout to incorporate developments in law and legal thinking, including special contributions on medical negligence ...
This book has been updated to reflect new case law and legislation, and to highlight recent trends relating to both traditional and offshore trusts.
This book is essential reading for students of Commonwealth Caribbean law as well as anyone wishing to get to grips with the new rules of civil procedure.
This book sets out in a clear and concise manner the central principles of insurance law in the Caribbean, guiding students through the complexities of the subject.