The distinguished scholars who gathered last year to honor Ian Macneil and to reflect on his contributions to the understanding of contract and contract law represent diverse methodologies, and they approach the vexing problems raised by relational contracts from different normative perspectives. But on one point, I daresay, they all agree: the central task in developing a plausible normative theory of contract law is to specify the appropriate role of the state in regulating incomplete contracts. Complete contracts (to the extent that they exist in the real world) are rarely, if ever, breached since by definition the payoffs for every relevant action and the corresponding sanctions for nonperformance are prescribed in the contract. In the ...
This article examines the claim that there are two different and often incompatible ‘worlds' within ...
This article examines the claim that there are two different and often incompatible ‘worlds' within ...
Formalism in contract law has had many defenders and many critics. What courts need, however, is an ...
The distinguished scholars who gathered last year to honor Ian Macneil and to reflect on his contrib...
The central task in developing a plausible normative theory of contract law is to specify the approp...
The central task in developing a plausible normative theory of contract law is to specify the approp...
Recent scholarship has demonstrated that a significant proportion of private contracts do not easily...
The article comments on the supposed need for a paradigm for the theory of contract, primarily by wa...
Contract law abhors incompleteness. Although no contract can be entirely complete, the idea of a pur...
Contract law abhors incompleteness. Although no contract can be entirely complete, the idea of a pur...
Contract law abhors incompleteness. Although no contract can be entirely complete, the idea of a pur...
The models within the theory of contracts can be divided into several sub-categories taking into con...
Contract law abhors incompleteness. Although no contract can be entirely complete, the idea of a pur...
Recent scholarship has demonstrated that a significant proportion of private contracts do not easily...
This article examines the claim that there are two different and often incompatible ‘worlds' within ...
This article examines the claim that there are two different and often incompatible ‘worlds' within ...
This article examines the claim that there are two different and often incompatible ‘worlds' within ...
Formalism in contract law has had many defenders and many critics. What courts need, however, is an ...
The distinguished scholars who gathered last year to honor Ian Macneil and to reflect on his contrib...
The central task in developing a plausible normative theory of contract law is to specify the approp...
The central task in developing a plausible normative theory of contract law is to specify the approp...
Recent scholarship has demonstrated that a significant proportion of private contracts do not easily...
The article comments on the supposed need for a paradigm for the theory of contract, primarily by wa...
Contract law abhors incompleteness. Although no contract can be entirely complete, the idea of a pur...
Contract law abhors incompleteness. Although no contract can be entirely complete, the idea of a pur...
Contract law abhors incompleteness. Although no contract can be entirely complete, the idea of a pur...
The models within the theory of contracts can be divided into several sub-categories taking into con...
Contract law abhors incompleteness. Although no contract can be entirely complete, the idea of a pur...
Recent scholarship has demonstrated that a significant proportion of private contracts do not easily...
This article examines the claim that there are two different and often incompatible ‘worlds' within ...
This article examines the claim that there are two different and often incompatible ‘worlds' within ...
This article examines the claim that there are two different and often incompatible ‘worlds' within ...
Formalism in contract law has had many defenders and many critics. What courts need, however, is an ...