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E-raamat: Private Law in the 21st Century

Edited by , Edited by (University of Queensland, Australia), Edited by (University of Queensland, Australia)
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This book brings together a wide range of contributors from across the common law world to identify and debate the principal moral and systemic challenges that are likely to face private law in the remaining part of the twenty-first century. The various contributions identify serious problems relating to complexity and overload, threats to research and education, the law's unintelligibility, the unsatisfactory nature of the law reform process and a general lack of public engagement. They consider the respective future roles of statutes, codes, and judge-made law (in the form of both common law and equitable rules). They consider how best to organise the private law system internally, and how to co-ordinate it externally with other public and economic systems (human rights, regulation, insurance markets and social security frameworks). They address the challenges for private law presented by new forms technology, and by modern demands for the protection of new and intangible forms of moral interest, such as interests in privacy, 'vindication' and 'personal choice'. They also engage with the critical contemporary debates about access to, and the privatisation of, civil justice. The work will be an important source of inspiration and reference to private lawyers, as well as legislators, policy-makers and students.

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An important and wide-ranging collection on the role and development of private law in the twenty-first century, including contributions from many of the world's leading private lawyers.
Preface v
Acknowledgements vii
Table of Cases
xiii
Table of Legislation
xxxiii
Table of Contributors
xliii
Part I Agendas and Predictions
1 Private Law as a Complex System: Agendas for the Twenty-First Century
3(26)
Kit Barker
2 Challenges for Private Law in the Twenty-First Century
29(18)
Andrew Burrows
3 Rationalising Tort Law for the Twenty-First Century
47(20)
Ken Oliphant
4 The Challenges of Private Law: A Research Agenda for an Autonomy-Based Private Law
67(22)
Hanoch Dagan
5 `The Steaming Lungs of a Pigeon': Predicting the Direction of Australian Contract Law in the Next 25 Years
89(18)
Warren Swain
Part II Legislation, Codification and the Role of the Common Law
6 Codification of Private Law: Scots Law at the Crossroads of Common and Civil law
107(24)
Martin A. Hogg
7 Power Failure? The Distracting Effect of Legislation on Common Law Torts
131(24)
Wendy Bonython
8 Constructive Trusteeship: The Perils of Statutory Formulae
155(18)
Darryn Jensen
Part III Complex Systems and Interactions
9 Fusing the Equitable Function in Private Law
173(24)
Henry E. Smith
10 Dealing with Complexity: Different Approaches to Explaining Accessory Liability
197(16)
Joachim Dietrich
11 The Challenges Presented by Fundamental Rights to Private Law
213(24)
Hugh Collins
12 The Limits of Technocracy: Private Law's Future in the Regulatory State
237(20)
T.T. Arvind
Joanna Gray
13 Common Law and the Constraint of Financial Markets: Credit Rating Agencies as a Test Case
257(24)
Joshua Getzler
Alexandra Whelan
14 Apologies as `Canaries'---Tortious Liability in Negligence and Insurance in the Twenty-First Century
281(20)
Prue Vines
15 When Lump Sums Run Out: Disputes at the Borderlines of Tort Law, Injury Compensation and Social Security
301(24)
Genevieve Grant
Kylie Burns
Rosamund Harrington
Prue Vines
Elizabeth Kendall
Annick Maujean
Part IV New Remedies, Technologies and Intangible Interests
16 `I'll Perform If and When You Do': Non-Performance and the Suspension of Contractual Duties
325(18)
Andrew Tettenborn
17 Vindicatory Damages
343(20)
James Edelman
18 Persuasive Technologies: From Loss of Privacy to Loss of Autonomy
363(26)
Eliza Mik
19 Snooping: How Should Damages be Assessed for Harmless Breaches of Privacy?
389(22)
Erika Chamberlain
20 Compensating Injury to Autonomy: A Conceptual and Normative Analysis
411(28)
Tsachi Keren-Paz
21 Matter over Mind: Tort Law's Treatment of Emotional Injury
439(24)
Anne Schuurman
Zoe Sinel
22 The Interaction Between Defamation and Privacy
463(16)
David Rolph
23 Making Amends by Apologising for Defamatory Publications: Developments in the Twenty-First Century
479(24)
Robyn Carroll
Jeffrey Berryman
Part V Process Challenges and the Privatisation of Justice
24 Tort and Neo-liberalism
503(24)
Annette Morris
25 Reforming Australian Litigation Lawyers: Educational Impacts of Civil Procedural Laws and Judicial Activism
527(20)
Francesca Bartlett
26 Private Law in the Age of the `Vanishing Trial'
547(14)
Carlo Vittorio Giabardo
Index 561
Kit Barker is Professor of Law, Karen Fairweather is Associate Lecturer in Law and Ross Grantham is Professor of Law, all at the TC Beirne School of Law, The University of Queensland.