SINGAPORE JOURNAL OF LEGAL STUDIES
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- Book Review
Book Review: The United Nations Emergency Force by Gabriella Rosner
Citation: [1964] Sing JLS 482 - Book Review
Book Review: Comparative Federalism(1st Edition) by Durga Das Basu
Citation: [1988] Sing JLS 482 - Book Review
Book Review: Torts in the Nineties by Nicholas J Mullany (ed)
Citation: [1998] Sing JLS 484 - Book Review
Book Review: Singapore Trusts Law by Christopher Hare and Vincent Ooi
Citation: [2022] Sing JLS 485First view: [Sep 2022 Online] Sing JLSIn recent years, a number of Singapore cases have come to the attention of common law trust lawyers outside Singapore. The emphasis on Singapore’s distinctiveness as an equity jurisdiction reflects trends in the field since Yihan Goh and Paul Tan’s Singapore Law: 50 Years in the Making (2015). To that end, Christopher Hare and Vincent Ooi’s book provides a strong and detailed coverage of the current state of Singapore trust law. - Book Review
Book Review: Clinical Legal Education by NR Madhava Menon
Citation: [1998] Sing JLS 486 - Book Review
Book Review: Form and Substance in Anglo-American Law – A Comparative Study of Legal Reasoning, Legal Theory, and Legal Institutions by P.S. Atiyah and Robert S. Summers
Citation: [1988] Sing JLS 487 - Book Review
Book Review: The Law of Advocates and Solicitors in Singapore and West Malaysia (2nd Edition) by Tan Yock Lin
Citation: [1998] Sing JLS 487 - Book Review
Book Review: Secured Transactions Law in Asia: Principles, Perspectives and Reform by Louise Gullifer and Dora Neo
Citation: [2022] Sing JLS 488First view: [Sep 2022 Online] Sing JLSSecured Transactions Law in Asia: Principles, Perspectives and Reform is the third in a series of works that critically examine secured transactions law reform around the world. From a focus on reforms in Europe in the first book to reforms in Africa in the second, this third volume looks at Asia, and specifically at reforms in 13 major Asian jurisdictions: China, Indonesia, Japan, Philippines, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam, Brunei Darussalam, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Singapore. The collection of essays by leading experts from academia, legal practice and the World Bank Group was first presented at a 2018 conference jointly organised by the National University of Singapore’s Centre for Banking & Finance Law and EW Barker Centre for Law & Business, and University of Oxford’s Commercial Law Centre at Harris Manchester College. - Book Review
Book Review: Financial Services Law and Regulation by Dora Swee Suan Neo, Hans Tjio and Luh Luh Lan, eds
Citation: [2019] Sing JLS 489Understanding the depth of financial regulations without losing the big picture has_x000D_ presented many challenges to practitioners, businesspersons, and naturally, students._x000D_ On the one hand, the modern financial market is complex and has multiple dimensions._x000D_ Traditionally, it has been divided into three major sectors: capital markets, banking, and insurance. Such divisions still underline financial regulations in many countries. Each sector has its own characteristics and practices, and an expert in one sector may not know the details of the other sectors. At the same time, different financial sectors and market participants interact and intersect, contributing to the market's complexity. Beyond the domestic market, there is an international dimension. The rise of international soft law and transnational regulatory networks that issue regulatory standards (eg, the Basel Accord issued by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision) adds another layer of complexity to the financial market. Understanding the overall financial market is a daunting task.