Professor David Milman (Herbert Smith Professor of Corporate and Commercial Law, University of Manchester) looks at the procedural aspects and financial constraints upon enforcing insolvency legislation following from reforms introduced in 1985-1986. He describes the use of the so-called “Carecraft” procedure, disqualifications and conditional fees in leading contemporary insolvency litigation. Note published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies and its Society for Advanced Legal Studies. The Journal is produced by the Society for Advanced Legal Studies at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London
Insolvency is the state of the debtor’s patrimony characterized by insufficientmonetary funds availa...
The decade since the financial crisis has witnessed a proliferation of various ‘light touch’ financi...
ABSTRACT: Insolvency procedures are constituted as measures aimed for the debtor and/or creditor(s) ...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by the Law Society in Litigation Funding on 0...
As a rule, corporate insolvency proceedings are financed from the debtor’s estate. To avoid the abat...
English law provides three forms of insolvency proceeding for companies: liquidation, administration...
Australia's corporate insolvency regime strives to provide flexible measures that allow stakeholders...
There is now an extensive literature chronicling the barriers that liquidators face in trying to bri...
The spate of cases dealing with the question of whether a liquidator can treat the costs of any liti...
grantor: University of TorontoCanadian insolvency law has historically been viewed as a se...
The characterisation of a security interest as 'fixed' or 'floating' has generated much litigation i...
The topic of this thesis is ineffectiveness of legal acts within the insolvency proceedings. This le...
In the context of the decision by the House of Lords in Buchler v. Talbot, and of the Government’s r...
What is effective insolvency law? Effective insolvency laws play an important role in the health of ...
This article explores the application of third-party litigation funding (TPLF), also referred to as ...
Insolvency is the state of the debtor’s patrimony characterized by insufficientmonetary funds availa...
The decade since the financial crisis has witnessed a proliferation of various ‘light touch’ financi...
ABSTRACT: Insolvency procedures are constituted as measures aimed for the debtor and/or creditor(s) ...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by the Law Society in Litigation Funding on 0...
As a rule, corporate insolvency proceedings are financed from the debtor’s estate. To avoid the abat...
English law provides three forms of insolvency proceeding for companies: liquidation, administration...
Australia's corporate insolvency regime strives to provide flexible measures that allow stakeholders...
There is now an extensive literature chronicling the barriers that liquidators face in trying to bri...
The spate of cases dealing with the question of whether a liquidator can treat the costs of any liti...
grantor: University of TorontoCanadian insolvency law has historically been viewed as a se...
The characterisation of a security interest as 'fixed' or 'floating' has generated much litigation i...
The topic of this thesis is ineffectiveness of legal acts within the insolvency proceedings. This le...
In the context of the decision by the House of Lords in Buchler v. Talbot, and of the Government’s r...
What is effective insolvency law? Effective insolvency laws play an important role in the health of ...
This article explores the application of third-party litigation funding (TPLF), also referred to as ...
Insolvency is the state of the debtor’s patrimony characterized by insufficientmonetary funds availa...
The decade since the financial crisis has witnessed a proliferation of various ‘light touch’ financi...
ABSTRACT: Insolvency procedures are constituted as measures aimed for the debtor and/or creditor(s) ...