While Government interest is lacking in reforming the English law of secured transactions, there is interest in the academic and practitioner community in different models of reform. This paper examines what type of security interest a statutory security right along the lines of the Personal Property Security Act interest would be. It seems that such an interest would be common law right, but also a charge and resembles most closely a legal version of the floating charge. The paper examines some of the implications of that characterisation as regards priority vis-à-vis interests outside of the statutory regime, and the scope for the retention and use of equitable doctrines such as marshalling. It also compares the situation to that under th...
The law of personal property covers a very wide spectrum of scenarios and, unfortunately, has had li...
The contribution considers the topical issue of the relationship between secured transactions and in...
This paper considers some of the difficulties arising from how English law conceptualises certain ty...
In this paper I describe the work that is currently under way, within the Network of Excellence char...
The subject of security over movable property is rightly seen as belonging to the core of activities...
This essay examines the law applicable to secured transactions. It addresses in particular the codif...
Inspired by similar reforms introduced in New Zealand, Canada and the United States, the Commonwealt...
The development of new technologies and the viral spread of communication networks have both rendere...
Discusses how the Law Commission's proposals in the consultation paper Registration of Security Inte...
Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”) Section 1-201(35) provides in its detailed definition of security in...
The Personal Property Security Act 1999 (the “PPSA”) implemented a number of key changes in New Zeal...
Featuring 16 chapters, the book provides a practitioner-oriented perspective on fixed charges over ...
Since the adoption of Uniform Commercial Code Article 9 in American jurisdictions in the 1960s, scho...
This review paper is a contribution to a symposium on the 'Future of Secured Credit in Europe'. Its ...
Reformers recently have attacked the priority accorded the Anglo-American nonpossessory secured tran...
The law of personal property covers a very wide spectrum of scenarios and, unfortunately, has had li...
The contribution considers the topical issue of the relationship between secured transactions and in...
This paper considers some of the difficulties arising from how English law conceptualises certain ty...
In this paper I describe the work that is currently under way, within the Network of Excellence char...
The subject of security over movable property is rightly seen as belonging to the core of activities...
This essay examines the law applicable to secured transactions. It addresses in particular the codif...
Inspired by similar reforms introduced in New Zealand, Canada and the United States, the Commonwealt...
The development of new technologies and the viral spread of communication networks have both rendere...
Discusses how the Law Commission's proposals in the consultation paper Registration of Security Inte...
Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”) Section 1-201(35) provides in its detailed definition of security in...
The Personal Property Security Act 1999 (the “PPSA”) implemented a number of key changes in New Zeal...
Featuring 16 chapters, the book provides a practitioner-oriented perspective on fixed charges over ...
Since the adoption of Uniform Commercial Code Article 9 in American jurisdictions in the 1960s, scho...
This review paper is a contribution to a symposium on the 'Future of Secured Credit in Europe'. Its ...
Reformers recently have attacked the priority accorded the Anglo-American nonpossessory secured tran...
The law of personal property covers a very wide spectrum of scenarios and, unfortunately, has had li...
The contribution considers the topical issue of the relationship between secured transactions and in...
This paper considers some of the difficulties arising from how English law conceptualises certain ty...