Key Facts

  • Key Facts: English
    By Stuart Wall, Geoff Black

    The remaining (blue) text will act as a prompt, indicating the type of information that the student has to remember. On cards with charts, graphs or diagrams, the acetate will mask out the labels.

  • Key Facts: Geography
    By Stuart Wall, Geoff Black

    The remaining (blue) text will act as a prompt, indicating the type of information that the student has to remember. On cards with charts, graphs or diagrams, the acetate will mask out the labels.

  • Key Facts
    By Stuart Wall, Geoff Black

    The remaining (blue) text will act as a prompt, indicating the type of information that the student has to remember. On cards with charts, graphs or diagrams, the acetate will mask out the labels.

  • Key Facts: The English Legal System
    By Jacqueline Martin

    Key Facts is the essential series for anyone studying law, including A Level, LLB, ILEX and post-graduate conversion courses.

  • Key Facts: Jurisprudence
    By Peter Halstead

    ... Locke and Hume, an interesting comparison being that whilst the three rationalists dealt with in section 3.2 influenced English jurisprudence, those English philosophers in turn heavily influenced Europe and America. Hobbes 1.

  • Key Facts: Employment Law
    By Chris Turner

    3e(2) an economic entity is an organised grouping of resources which has the objective of pursuing an economic objective whether or not the activity is central or ancillary. 8.3 The nature of a transfer for TUPE purposes 1.

  • Key Facts: Constitutional & Administrative Law
    By Joanne Sellick

    ... 1998), Northern Ireland (Northern Ireland Act 1998) and Wales (Wales Act 1998). However, the arrangements preserve the unlimited power of Parliament to legislate for the devolved regions and to override laws made by any of the devolved ...