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SINGAPORE JOURNAL OF LEGAL STUDIES

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  • Journal Result

  • Article

    Conflicting Interests: A Need to Revise Values

    Citation: [1974] Sing JLS 218
  • Article

    Legal Implications of the ASEAN Free Trade Area (Asia-Pacific Rim)

    Citation: [1994] Sing JLS 218
    At the landmark Fourth ASEAN Summit in Singapore, the ASEAN Heads of Government signed an agreement which is intended to bring about the ASEAN Free Trade Area. This article traces ASEAN economic cooperation in the past and analyses the contents and legal implications of the ASEAN Free Trade Area Agreement.
  • Article

    Population Control: Past Decisions and Future Policy

    Citation: [1971] Sing JLS 219
  • Article

    Caveats – Two Questions

    Citation: [1987] Sing JLS 219
    This article brings into question some aspects of the nature, function and effect of the caveat in the Singapore Torrents system. Two questions are posed and the attempt to answer them has involved essentially an examination of the provisions of the Land Titles Act and gleanings from the experiences of other Torrens jurisdictions.
  • Article

    Twenty Years (and More) of Controlling Unfair Contract Terms in Singapore

    Citation: [2016] Sing JLS 219
    The Unfair Contract Terms Act and s 3 of the Misrepresentation Act were formally adopted from the UK into Singapore in November 1993. The Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act followed about ten years later. This article discusses how these statutes have operated, primarily by examining how they have been applied in the case law, and reflects on their modus operandi and capacity to promote contractual fairness.
  • Article

    The Meaning of Charity in Malaya – A Comparative Study

    Citation: [1969] Sing JLS 220
  • Article

    The Language of the Courts

    Citation: [1962] Sing JLS 221
  • Article

    The Right of Asylum in International Law

    Citation: [1961] Sing JLS 223
  • Article

    The Three-Part Test: Yet Another Test of Duty in Negligence

    Citation: [1989] Sing JLS 223
    The article discusses the major tests that have been applied since Donoghue v. Stevenson to determine the existence of a duty of care in the tort of negligence. It is critical of the more recent tests that are based upon the “proximity” element. The article argues for a resuscitation of the Wilberforce two-stage test of the foreseeability basis that is qualified by public policies as the best available test that has been evolved so far. This test must, however, be applied, in the future, with greater circumspection and with greater regard for prior decisions that restricted or excluded recovery than before.
  • Article

    State Criminal Jurisdiction

    Citation: [1967] Sing JLS 224