Fault in American Contract Law
Herausgeber: Ben-Shahar, Omri; Porat, Ariel
Fault in American Contract Law
Herausgeber: Ben-Shahar, Omri; Porat, Ariel
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Representing an unprecedented effort from top scholars, this volume collects original contributions to examine the fundamental role of 'fault' in contract law.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
Fault in American Contract Law42,99 €
BeatsonFAITH FAULT CONTRACT LAW C77,99 €
Fault in Criminal Law56,99 €
Jonathan MorganContract Law Minimalism118,99 €
Stephen WaddamsPrinciple and Policy in Contract Law79,99 €
Neil AndrewsContract Law171,99 €
Commercial Contract Law62,99 €-
-
-
Representing an unprecedented effort from top scholars, this volume collects original contributions to examine the fundamental role of 'fault' in contract law.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 338
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. Oktober 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 672g
- ISBN-13: 9780521769853
- ISBN-10: 052176985X
- Artikelnr.: 30362630
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 338
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. Oktober 2010
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 672g
- ISBN-13: 9780521769853
- ISBN-10: 052176985X
- Artikelnr.: 30362630
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Part I. The Case for Strict Liability: 1. Let us never blame a contract
breaker Richard A. Posner; 2. In (partial) defense of strict liability in
contract Robert E. Scott; 3. The fault principle as the chameleon of
contract law: a market function approach Stefan Grundmann; Part II. The
Case for Fault: 4. How fault shapes contract law George M. Cohen; 5. Fault
in contract law Eric A. Posner; 6. The role of fault in contract law:
unconscionability, unexpected circumstances, interpretation, mistake, and
nonperformance Melvin Aron Eisenberg; Part III. Between Strict Liability
and Fault: 7. Fault at the contract-tort interface Roy Kreitner; 8. The
many faces of fault in contract law: or how to do economics right, without
really trying Richard A. Epstein; 9. The productive tension between
official and unofficial stories of fault in contract law Martha M. Ertman;
Part IV. Willful Breach: 10. When is a willful breach 'willful'? The link
between definitions and damages Richard Craswell; 11. Willful breach: an
efficient screen for efficient breach Peter Siegelman and Steve Thel; 12.
An information theory of willful breach Oren Bar-Gill and Omri Ben-Shahar;
13. Contract law and the willfulness diversion Barry E. Adler; Part V.
Comparative Fault: 14. A comparative fault defense in contract law Ariel
Porat; 15. Stipulated damages, super-strict liability, and mitigation in
contract law Saul Levmore; 16. Creditor's fault: in search of a comparative
frame Fabrizio Caffagi; Part VI. The Morality of Breach: 17. Why breach of
contract may not be immoral given the incompleteness of contracts Steven
Shavell; 18. Fault and harm in breach of contract Dori Kimel; 19. Fault in
contracts, a psychological approach Tess Wilkinson-Ryan.
breaker Richard A. Posner; 2. In (partial) defense of strict liability in
contract Robert E. Scott; 3. The fault principle as the chameleon of
contract law: a market function approach Stefan Grundmann; Part II. The
Case for Fault: 4. How fault shapes contract law George M. Cohen; 5. Fault
in contract law Eric A. Posner; 6. The role of fault in contract law:
unconscionability, unexpected circumstances, interpretation, mistake, and
nonperformance Melvin Aron Eisenberg; Part III. Between Strict Liability
and Fault: 7. Fault at the contract-tort interface Roy Kreitner; 8. The
many faces of fault in contract law: or how to do economics right, without
really trying Richard A. Epstein; 9. The productive tension between
official and unofficial stories of fault in contract law Martha M. Ertman;
Part IV. Willful Breach: 10. When is a willful breach 'willful'? The link
between definitions and damages Richard Craswell; 11. Willful breach: an
efficient screen for efficient breach Peter Siegelman and Steve Thel; 12.
An information theory of willful breach Oren Bar-Gill and Omri Ben-Shahar;
13. Contract law and the willfulness diversion Barry E. Adler; Part V.
Comparative Fault: 14. A comparative fault defense in contract law Ariel
Porat; 15. Stipulated damages, super-strict liability, and mitigation in
contract law Saul Levmore; 16. Creditor's fault: in search of a comparative
frame Fabrizio Caffagi; Part VI. The Morality of Breach: 17. Why breach of
contract may not be immoral given the incompleteness of contracts Steven
Shavell; 18. Fault and harm in breach of contract Dori Kimel; 19. Fault in
contracts, a psychological approach Tess Wilkinson-Ryan.
Part I. The Case for Strict Liability: 1. Let us never blame a contract
breaker Richard A. Posner; 2. In (partial) defense of strict liability in
contract Robert E. Scott; 3. The fault principle as the chameleon of
contract law: a market function approach Stefan Grundmann; Part II. The
Case for Fault: 4. How fault shapes contract law George M. Cohen; 5. Fault
in contract law Eric A. Posner; 6. The role of fault in contract law:
unconscionability, unexpected circumstances, interpretation, mistake, and
nonperformance Melvin Aron Eisenberg; Part III. Between Strict Liability
and Fault: 7. Fault at the contract-tort interface Roy Kreitner; 8. The
many faces of fault in contract law: or how to do economics right, without
really trying Richard A. Epstein; 9. The productive tension between
official and unofficial stories of fault in contract law Martha M. Ertman;
Part IV. Willful Breach: 10. When is a willful breach 'willful'? The link
between definitions and damages Richard Craswell; 11. Willful breach: an
efficient screen for efficient breach Peter Siegelman and Steve Thel; 12.
An information theory of willful breach Oren Bar-Gill and Omri Ben-Shahar;
13. Contract law and the willfulness diversion Barry E. Adler; Part V.
Comparative Fault: 14. A comparative fault defense in contract law Ariel
Porat; 15. Stipulated damages, super-strict liability, and mitigation in
contract law Saul Levmore; 16. Creditor's fault: in search of a comparative
frame Fabrizio Caffagi; Part VI. The Morality of Breach: 17. Why breach of
contract may not be immoral given the incompleteness of contracts Steven
Shavell; 18. Fault and harm in breach of contract Dori Kimel; 19. Fault in
contracts, a psychological approach Tess Wilkinson-Ryan.
breaker Richard A. Posner; 2. In (partial) defense of strict liability in
contract Robert E. Scott; 3. The fault principle as the chameleon of
contract law: a market function approach Stefan Grundmann; Part II. The
Case for Fault: 4. How fault shapes contract law George M. Cohen; 5. Fault
in contract law Eric A. Posner; 6. The role of fault in contract law:
unconscionability, unexpected circumstances, interpretation, mistake, and
nonperformance Melvin Aron Eisenberg; Part III. Between Strict Liability
and Fault: 7. Fault at the contract-tort interface Roy Kreitner; 8. The
many faces of fault in contract law: or how to do economics right, without
really trying Richard A. Epstein; 9. The productive tension between
official and unofficial stories of fault in contract law Martha M. Ertman;
Part IV. Willful Breach: 10. When is a willful breach 'willful'? The link
between definitions and damages Richard Craswell; 11. Willful breach: an
efficient screen for efficient breach Peter Siegelman and Steve Thel; 12.
An information theory of willful breach Oren Bar-Gill and Omri Ben-Shahar;
13. Contract law and the willfulness diversion Barry E. Adler; Part V.
Comparative Fault: 14. A comparative fault defense in contract law Ariel
Porat; 15. Stipulated damages, super-strict liability, and mitigation in
contract law Saul Levmore; 16. Creditor's fault: in search of a comparative
frame Fabrizio Caffagi; Part VI. The Morality of Breach: 17. Why breach of
contract may not be immoral given the incompleteness of contracts Steven
Shavell; 18. Fault and harm in breach of contract Dori Kimel; 19. Fault in
contracts, a psychological approach Tess Wilkinson-Ryan.







