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Supreme Court Law Review, 3rd Series, Volume 3

This second volume of papers addressing The Power and Limits of Private Law is based on the third Canadian Law of Obligations conference (“CLO III”) held on June 23-24, 2022, at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.
Langue De Publication: English
Book
275,00 $
Quantité

Hardcover | 236 pages

Publié: 30 septembre 2024
ISBN/ISSN: 9780433533719

Détails des produits

This second volume of papers addressing The Power and Limits of Private Law is based on the third Canadian Law of Obligations conference (“CLO III”) held on June 23-24, 2022, at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. This special collection of papers is a useful reference for lawyers, judges, academics and students who deal with private law issues on a day-to-day basis.

The collection is divided into six parts:

  • Part I: The Power and Limits of Categorical Thinking in Private Law
  • Part II: Beyond Bilateral Relations
  • Part III: The Power and Limits of Private Ordering
  • Part IV: The Power and Limits of Regarding Private Property as Exclusion
  • Part V: Private Law Exotica
  • Part VI: The Power and Limits of Private Law as a Vehicle for the Pursuit of Self-Interest
 

Auteurs à la une

Table des matières

The Canadian Law of Obligations 2022 – Marcus Moore and Samuel Beswick

PART I: THE POWER AND LIMITS OF CATEGORICAL THINKING IN PRIVATE LAW
Chapter 1: Keeping Taxonomy in its Place: Recent Canadian Experience with Unjust Enrichment – John D. McCamus

PART II: BEYOND BILATERAL RELATIONS
Chapter 2: The Power and Limits of Close Connection: Assessing the Legacy of Bazley v. Curry Through Three International Case Studies – Desmond Ryan

Chapter 3: Vicarious Liability: Policy, Rationales and its Limits – Aaron Yoong, Louis Lau Yi Hang and Chang Wen Yee

PART III: THE POWER AND LIMITS OF PRIVATE ORDERING
Chapter 4: The Regulatory Relevance and Legitimacy of Contract Law in Juxtaposition to Private Ordering – Bogna Kaczorowska

PART IV: THE POWER AND LIMITS OF REGARDING PRIVATE PROPERTY AS EXCLUSION
Chapter 5: The Open Casebook Revolution – Samuel Beswick and Maddison Zapach

PART V: PRIVATE LAW EXOTICA
Chapter 6: Corrective Justice and In Personam Rights: Reconsidering the Tort of Inducing Breach of Contract – Stéphane Sérafin and Kerry Sun

Chapter 7: Beyond the King’s Peace: Direct Interferences With the Person as Tortious Interferences with Autonomy – Margaret Hall

PART VI: THE POWER AND LIMITS OF PRIVATE LAW AS A VEHICLE FOR THE PURSUIT OF SELF-INTEREST
Chapter 8: Confusion, Illusion or Delusion: The Irreducible Core of the Common Law Trust – Lionel Smith

Table of Cases