Current legal problems. Vol. 62, 2009
Current legal problems.
Law of the United Kingdom and Ireland > England and Wales > KD660
Edition Details
- Creator or Attribution (Responsibility): George Letsas
- Language: English
- Jurisdiction(s): England
- Publication Information: Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2010
- Type: Book
- Series title: Current legal publications
- Permalink: https://books.lawi.org.uk/current-legal-problems-vol-62-2009/ (Stable identifier)
Short Description
XXIII, 564 pages ; 23 cm.
Purpose and Intended Audience
Useful for students learning an area of law, Current legal problems. Vol. 62, 2009 is also useful for lawyers seeking to apply the law to issues arising in practice.
Research References
- Providing references to further research sources: Search
More Options
- Find it at other libraries via WorldCat/OCLC
- Find Current legal problems. Vol. 62, 2009 in Google Books
- Find Current legal problems. Vol. 62, 2009 in Open Library
Bibliographic information
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Responsable Person: edited by Colm O’Cinneide ; deputy editor, George Letsas ; assistant editor, Christopher Campbell-Holt.
- Publication Date: 2010
- Country/State: England
- Number of Editions: 1 editions
- First edition Date: 2010
- Last edition Date: 2010
- Languages: English
- Library of Congress Code: KD660
- Dewey Code: 349.42
- ISBN: 9780199583737 0199583730
- OCLC: 458730476
Main Contents
1. False Contingency; 2. Abstraction and Equality; 3. The Human Face of the Rule of Law; 4. Constitutional Review, the Courts, and Democratic Scepticism; 5. English Lessons: A Comparative Analysis of UK and US Responses to Terrorism; 6. Art, Law, and Creativity; 7. ‘A Normal Man…Hardly Exists’: Law, Narrative, the Psyche, and the Normal Man; 8. Beyond Safety? The Broadening Scope of Risk Regulation; 9. ‘Fair Play to All Sides of the Truth’: Controlling Media Distortions; 10. Cohabitation: Current Legal Solutions; 11. ‘Lost in Translation’? Towards a Theory of Economic Transplants; 12. Gauging the Cumbersomeness of EU Law; 13. European Tort Law: A Primer for the Common Lawyer; 14. Team of Rivals? Toward a New Model of the Corporate Attorney/Client Relationship
Summary Note
Current Legal Problems has long been recognised as a major reference point for current trends in legal scholarship. The continuing strength of Current Legal Problems is its representation of a broad range of legal opinion, theory, methodology, and subject matter, with an emphasis upon contemporary developments in law.
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