This comprehensive selection of the most important documents on contract, tort and restitution covers only the provisions that are actually needed for university courses.
This comprehensive selection of the most important documents on contract, tort and restitution covers only the provisions that are actually needed for university courses.
Fully revised and updated to provide comprehensive coverage of all the most important legislation on property law, this book is designed specifically for students preparing for examinations and includes unannotated primary and secondary legislation as well as detailed tables of content to aid quick and efficient research.
Designed specifically for students, 'Blackstone's Statutes' lead the market in providing a carefully selected, regularly updated, & well sourced collection of legislation for the core subjects & major options offered on the law syllabus. Each title is ideal for use throughout the course & in exams.
Designed specifically for students, 'Blackstone's Statutes' lead the market in providing a carefully selected, regularly updated, and well sourced collection of legislation for the core subjects and major options offered on the law syllabus.
Market-leading and first choice with students and lecturers, Blackstone's Statutes have a 25-year tradition of trust and quality unrivalled by others, and a rock-solid reputation for accuracy, reliability, and authority. Relied on by students in exams and for course use since 1987; they set the standard by which other statute books are measured.
This text has been revised and updated to provide comprehensive coverage of all the most important legislation on family law. By selecting only the provisions actually needed for university courses in family law, the book is kept compact. Having no commentary the book can be used in examinations.
This comprehensive and up-to-date selection of the most important legislation on public law and human rights is designed specifically for students. It provides unannotated primary and secondary legislation, detailed tables of content to aid quick and efficient research, as well as web links.
Tort law is often regarded as the clearest example of traditional common law reasoning. Yet, in the past 40 years, the common law of England and Wales has been subject to European influences as a result of the introduction of the European Communities Act 1972 and, more recently, the implementation of the Human Rights Act 1998 in October 2000. EU Directives have led to changes to the law relating to product liability, health and safety in the workplace, and defamation, while Francovich liability introduces a new tort imposing State liability for breach of EU law. The 1998 Act has led to developments in privacy law and made the courts reconsider their approach to public authority liability and freedom of expression in defamation law. This book explores how English tort law has changed as a result of Europeanisation - broadly defined as the influence of European Union and European human rights law. It also analyses how this influence has impacted on traditional common law reasoning. Has Europeanisation led to changes to the common law legal tradition or has the latter proved more resistant to change than might have been expected?