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SINGAPORE JOURNAL OF LEGAL STUDIES

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  • Journal Result

  • Book Review

    Book Review: The Estate Duty Act by D. H. Nanavati

    Citation: [1960] Sing JLS 365
  • Book Review

    Book Review: Chalmers’ Sale of Goods, Fifteenth edition by Michael Mark

    Citation: [1967] Sing JLS 366
  • Book Review

    Periodicals: Index to Foreign Legal Periodicals Vol. 1 No. 1 Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, London, in co-operation with The American Association of Law Libraries

    Citation: [1960] Sing JLS 366
  • Book Review

    Book Review: The Tax Raiders by Nigel Tutt

    Citation: [1987] Sing JLS 367
  • Book Review

    Book Review: Evidence Third Edition by Rupert Cross, D.C.L., Solicitor; Vinerian Professor of English Law in the University of Oxford and Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford

    Citation: [1967] Sing JLS 367
  • Book Review

    Book Review: British International Law Cases, Vol. 3 British Institute Studies on International and Comparative Law No. British Digest of International Law Phase 1, Part I, Vol. 7 by Clive Parry ed.

    Citation: [1966] Sing JLS 367
  • Book Review

    Book Review: Parent-Child Law in Singapore by O.S. Khoo

    Citation: [1986] Sing JLS 368
  • Book Review

    Book Review: Modern Trade Union Law by Cyril Grunfeld

    Citation: [1967] Sing JLS 368
  • Book Review

    Book Review: Contract as Assumption II: Formation, Performance and Enforcement by Brian Coote, ed by JW Carter

    Citation: [2016] Sing JLS 369
    The saying that we “stand on the shoulders of giants" couldn't be more apt for Emeritus_x000D_ Professor Brian Coote CBE, who has influenced and stimulated our thinking about modern contract law in so many ways. Just one example of this influential scholarship, which features in this volume, is Coote's unorthodox but persuasive view of exemption clauses as demarcating the primary obligations under the contract, rather than acting to protect from a liability that otherwise arises. Coote's modest remark in the final chapter of this book, “[w]ho is interested in my kind of contract anyway?" (at p 206) belies the attention paid to his insights by scholars all over. As the title of the volume indicates, this text continues the theme of an earlier volume, Contract as Assumption: Essays on a Theme (2010). In this book, edited and prefaced by Emeritus Professor John Carter, another contract giant and fellow antipodean, contract scholars are offered a second collection, mostly of Coote's previous writings that were previously published in books or eminent journals including_x000D_ the Cambridge Law Journal, Journal of Contract Law and the Modern Law Review._x000D_ Each of the republished chapters has seen slight changes from the original as part of_x000D_ Carter's editing contribution. The predominant focus is on aspects of contract formation,_x000D_ explored against the background of Coote's theory of contract as assumed,_x000D_ not imposed, obligations.
  • Book Review

    Book Review: Comparative Constitutional Law by Durga Das Basu

    Citation: [1987] Sing JLS 369