
SINGAPORE JOURNAL OF LEGAL STUDIES


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- Book Review
Book Review: The Sources of Nigerian Law by A. E. W. Park, B.A.
Citation: [1964] Sing JLS 221 - Book Review
Book Review: Tan Sook Yee’s Principles of Singapore Land Law by Tang HangWu and Kelvin F.K. Low, eds.
Citation: [2010] Sing JLS 222The new edition of this text has been highly anticipated. In his Foreword, the Chief Justice of Singapore Chan Sek Keong notes that eight years after the second edition, this third edition is called for because of what the editors have described as “the breathtaking pace of the development of Singapore land jurisprudence”. In her Preface, Professor Tan Sook Yee also agrees that it was very clear that a third edition was becoming long overdue. - Book Review
Book Review : The Constitution of Malaysia: A Contextual Analysis by Andrew Harding
Citation: [2013] Sing JLS 223I first encountered Andrew Harding's work as a young law student when I became_x000D_ fascinated with Malaysian constitutional law. Harding's exegeses on public law and_x000D_ Islam (e.g., Andrew Harding, "Islam and Public Law in Malaysia: Some Reflections_x000D_ in the Aftermath of Susie Teoh's Case" (1991) 1 M.L.J. xci, and Andrew Harding,_x000D_ "The Keris, the Crescent and the Blind Goddess: The State, Islam and the Constitution_x000D_ in Malaysia" (2002) 6 Singapore Journal of International and Comparative Law 154) shaped my early understanding of Malaysian constitutional law, state and religion. His Geertzian approach to law draws out the complexity and anomalies of the pluralistic, post-colonial, and democratising Malaysian state. This perceptive local knowledge pervades his latest book, The Constitution of Malaysia: A Contextual Analysis, where he surveys the past, scrutinises the present, and meditates on the future of Malaysian constitutional law. It is part of the Constitutional Systems of theWorld series, which provides a comprehensive range of introductory texts on the various constitutions in the world. - Book Review
Book Review: Law of Partnership in Australia and New Zealand by P. F. P. Higgins
Citation: [1965] Sing JLS 223 - Book Review
Book Review: Elements of Family Law in Singapore by Leong Wai Kum
Citation: [2008] Sing JLS 224 - Book Review
Book Review: The Harbour Act, 1964 by T. A. McLoughlin, LL.M. and E. Eden, M.A.
Citation: [1965] Sing JLS 224 - Book Review
Book Review: African Law by Hans W. Baade and Robinson O. Everett eds. with specialist contributors
Citation: [1964] Sing JLS 224 - Book Review
Book Review: Naissance et Signification de la Declaration des Droitsde L’Homme by Albert Verdroot Protection of Human Rights Under the Law by Gaius Ezejiofor First Amendment Freedoms by Milton R. Konvitz
Citation: [1965] Sing JLS 225 - Book Review
Book Review: Bignold’s Police Offences, 9th Edition by A. J. Goran, Q.C. and R. P. Vine Hall.
Citation: [1964] Sing JLS 225 - Book Review
Book Review: Corporate Social Responsibility of Multinational Corporations in Developing Countries: Perspectives on Anti-Corruption by Adefolake O. Adeyeye
Citation: [2013] Sing JLS 226Corruption is a scourge that has been afflicting several countries, particularly in the_x000D_ developing world. It has impeded economic progress and adversely affected the basic_x000D_ human rights of citizens. Although the spotlight is usually focused on government officials in those countries who represent the "demand" side of corruption, their blameworthiness is equally shared by some multinational corporations ("MNCs") who represent the "supply" side of corruption by offering favours to public officials in order to successfully secure business transactions through the use of such influence. While a multitude of approaches is being adopted both internationally and by national governments to tackle corruption, the concept of corporate social responsibility ("CSR") is rapidly gaining ascendancy as an anti-corruption tool. CSR attempts to strike at the root of the problem by addressing the supply side, which in the developing-country context is represented by MNCs that are operating there.