Private law : key encounters with public law / edited by Kit Barker and Darryn Jensen.

Contributor(s): Barker, Kit | Jensen, DarrynMaterial type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Cambridge University Press, 2013Description: 1 online resource (388 pages)Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781107503779Subject(s): Civil law | Public lawGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Private law : key encounters with public law.DDC classification: 346 LOC classification: K623 | .P747 2013Online resources: Click to View
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: Part I. Introduction: 1. Private law: key encounters with public law Kit Barker and Darryn Jensen; Part II. Private and Public: Definitions, Theory and Taxonomy: 2. Public and private: neither deep nor meaningful William Lucy and Alexander Williams; 3. Courts as public authorities, private law as instrument of government Steve Hedley; 4. Origins of the public/private theory of legal systems Christian Turner; Part III. Private and Public: Key Encounters: 5. What is the point of charity law? Matthew Harding; 6. Public benefit, discrimination and the definition of charity Adam Parachin; 7. Private law and its normative influence on human rights Michelle Flaherty; 8. The synthesis of public and private in finance law Alastair Hudson; 9. Discerning public law concepts in corporate law discourse Anita Krug; 10. A public role for the intentional torts Dan Priel; 11. Cy-pres as a class action remedy - justly maligned or just misunderstood? Jeff Berryman and Robyn Carroll.
Summary: "The relationship between private and public law has long been the focus of critical attention, but recent years have seen the growing influence upon private law of statutory intervention, public regulation, corporate globalisation and constitutional and international human rights norms. Such developments increasingly call into question the capacity of private law reasoning to operate in isolation from public institutions and goals. Commencing with three contrasting visions of the nature and importance of distinctions between public and private in the modern day, this book traces a number of encounters between private law and 'public' values in key areas of private law doctrine, such as charity law, commercial law, tort law and class actions, across several jurisdictions. It examines the influence within these fields of public concepts and goals, such as behavioural modification, accountability and anti-discrimination norms, as well as the (reverse) influence that private law has upon ('public') human rights jurisprudence"-- Provided by publisher.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
No physical items for this record

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Machine generated contents note: Part I. Introduction: 1. Private law: key encounters with public law Kit Barker and Darryn Jensen; Part II. Private and Public: Definitions, Theory and Taxonomy: 2. Public and private: neither deep nor meaningful William Lucy and Alexander Williams; 3. Courts as public authorities, private law as instrument of government Steve Hedley; 4. Origins of the public/private theory of legal systems Christian Turner; Part III. Private and Public: Key Encounters: 5. What is the point of charity law? Matthew Harding; 6. Public benefit, discrimination and the definition of charity Adam Parachin; 7. Private law and its normative influence on human rights Michelle Flaherty; 8. The synthesis of public and private in finance law Alastair Hudson; 9. Discerning public law concepts in corporate law discourse Anita Krug; 10. A public role for the intentional torts Dan Priel; 11. Cy-pres as a class action remedy - justly maligned or just misunderstood? Jeff Berryman and Robyn Carroll.

"The relationship between private and public law has long been the focus of critical attention, but recent years have seen the growing influence upon private law of statutory intervention, public regulation, corporate globalisation and constitutional and international human rights norms. Such developments increasingly call into question the capacity of private law reasoning to operate in isolation from public institutions and goals. Commencing with three contrasting visions of the nature and importance of distinctions between public and private in the modern day, this book traces a number of encounters between private law and 'public' values in key areas of private law doctrine, such as charity law, commercial law, tort law and class actions, across several jurisdictions. It examines the influence within these fields of public concepts and goals, such as behavioural modification, accountability and anti-discrimination norms, as well as the (reverse) influence that private law has upon ('public') human rights jurisprudence"-- Provided by publisher.

Description based on print version record.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest, 2015. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest affiliated libraries.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.