This book review of Mark Lunney's work emphasises the distinctively Australian law developed by local courts and local legislatures, despite the existence of a right of appeal to the Privy Council and the notion of a single common law of England. It also addresses the use of primary contemporaneous materials, including newspaper reports and judicial diaries, and the role of legal history in the principled and coherent development of the law in the 21st century
This is a one volume revised edition of Cooley\u27s famous Treatise on Torts. The book appears to ...
The New Law of Torts third edition continues to question whether foundational principles and policie...
Book review of 'Tort liability of public authorities' by Susan Kneebone, LBC Information Services, N...
A book review of 'A Jurisprudence of power : Victorian empire and the rule of law', Rande W. Kostal,...
This is a contemporary legal history book for Australian law students, written in an engaging style ...
This articile reviews TT Arvind Jenny Steele (eds), Tort Law and the Legislature. Common Law, Statut...
A book review of 'The Invention of Terra Nullius : historical and legal fictions on the foundation o...
The Law of Agency, its History and Present Principles by S. J. Stoljar; The Law of Quasi Contract by...
Although UK courts have, for many years, had power to make wills for those lacking testamentary capa...
Although UK courts have, for many years, had power to make wills for those lacking testamentary capa...
A book review of 'The kercher reports : decisions of the New South Wales Supreme Courts', edited by ...
1noThe paper reviews one of the latest entries in the ever-growing catalogue of English language cas...
An essential text for tort law students, this is the first to comprehensively cover recent tort refo...
Australian Divorce law and practice by Paul Toose, Ray Watson and David Benjafield, reviewed by Roma...
A book review of 'A History of water rights at common law', Joshua Getzler, Oxford University Press,...
This is a one volume revised edition of Cooley\u27s famous Treatise on Torts. The book appears to ...
The New Law of Torts third edition continues to question whether foundational principles and policie...
Book review of 'Tort liability of public authorities' by Susan Kneebone, LBC Information Services, N...
A book review of 'A Jurisprudence of power : Victorian empire and the rule of law', Rande W. Kostal,...
This is a contemporary legal history book for Australian law students, written in an engaging style ...
This articile reviews TT Arvind Jenny Steele (eds), Tort Law and the Legislature. Common Law, Statut...
A book review of 'The Invention of Terra Nullius : historical and legal fictions on the foundation o...
The Law of Agency, its History and Present Principles by S. J. Stoljar; The Law of Quasi Contract by...
Although UK courts have, for many years, had power to make wills for those lacking testamentary capa...
Although UK courts have, for many years, had power to make wills for those lacking testamentary capa...
A book review of 'The kercher reports : decisions of the New South Wales Supreme Courts', edited by ...
1noThe paper reviews one of the latest entries in the ever-growing catalogue of English language cas...
An essential text for tort law students, this is the first to comprehensively cover recent tort refo...
Australian Divorce law and practice by Paul Toose, Ray Watson and David Benjafield, reviewed by Roma...
A book review of 'A History of water rights at common law', Joshua Getzler, Oxford University Press,...
This is a one volume revised edition of Cooley\u27s famous Treatise on Torts. The book appears to ...
The New Law of Torts third edition continues to question whether foundational principles and policie...
Book review of 'Tort liability of public authorities' by Susan Kneebone, LBC Information Services, N...