This article compares differences in the reasoning underlying contractual relationships between English and New Zealand law and U.S. and Japanese law. It then builds upon an existing framework by adding the notion of didactic formality to identify another important contrast between the laws of these countries. It also discusses how CISG and UPICC fit in to this spectrum. The article concludes by questioning strong convergence theory in commercial law worldwide. Governing Contracts – Public and Private Perspectives, Symposium. Osgoode Hall Law School, Toronto, November 9-10, 200
This article examines the claim that there are two different and often incompatible ‘worlds' within ...
This Article discusses some of the difficulties of multinational contracting by examining some major...
OSInternational audienceContract theory qualifies legal origins theory by focusing on codified defau...
This article compares differences in the reasoning underlying contractual relationships between Engl...
article published in law journalThis article explores "the Japanese advantage" in the enforcement of...
Part One of this thesis develops the "form-substance" analytical framework proposed by Atiyah and Su...
This translation of an original Japanese language work by Michida Shinichirō contrasts the differenc...
The choice of law dilemma for international contracts is the subject of this thesis. In Part A the c...
This book focuses on the law of commercial contracts as constructed by the U.S. and UK legal systems...
The legal literature has long showed that common law courts tend to interpret contracts in a more li...
Abstract This paper addresses a need for legal predictability in international sale of goods. The au...
The aim of the research is the study of the situation on which unexpected circumstances render the p...
Contract theory qualifies legal origins theory by focusing on codified default rules, which ease the...
This Article aims to contribute to a better understanding of the international contracting process b...
Abstract This thesis examines international commercial contracts from the perspective of the United...
This article examines the claim that there are two different and often incompatible ‘worlds' within ...
This Article discusses some of the difficulties of multinational contracting by examining some major...
OSInternational audienceContract theory qualifies legal origins theory by focusing on codified defau...
This article compares differences in the reasoning underlying contractual relationships between Engl...
article published in law journalThis article explores "the Japanese advantage" in the enforcement of...
Part One of this thesis develops the "form-substance" analytical framework proposed by Atiyah and Su...
This translation of an original Japanese language work by Michida Shinichirō contrasts the differenc...
The choice of law dilemma for international contracts is the subject of this thesis. In Part A the c...
This book focuses on the law of commercial contracts as constructed by the U.S. and UK legal systems...
The legal literature has long showed that common law courts tend to interpret contracts in a more li...
Abstract This paper addresses a need for legal predictability in international sale of goods. The au...
The aim of the research is the study of the situation on which unexpected circumstances render the p...
Contract theory qualifies legal origins theory by focusing on codified default rules, which ease the...
This Article aims to contribute to a better understanding of the international contracting process b...
Abstract This thesis examines international commercial contracts from the perspective of the United...
This article examines the claim that there are two different and often incompatible ‘worlds' within ...
This Article discusses some of the difficulties of multinational contracting by examining some major...
OSInternational audienceContract theory qualifies legal origins theory by focusing on codified defau...