From: | Jason W Neyers <jneyers@uwo.ca> |
To: | Obligations list <obligations@uwo.ca> |
Date: | 21/10/2020 12:30:19 |
Subject: | ODG: Just Published! |
Dear Colleagues:
Congratulations go out to ODGers Elise Bant and Jeannie Paterson and Sinéad Agnew, Paul S Davies and Charles Mitchell on their recent edited collections with Hart. Details below:
Edited by Elise Bant and Jeannie Marie Paterson
This collection brings together a team of outstanding scholars from across the common law world to explore the treatment of misleading silence in private law doctrine and theory. Whereas previous
studies have been contractual in focus, here the topic is explored from across the full spectrum of private law. Its approach encompasses equitable and common law principles, as well as taking an integrated approach to key statutory regimes. The highly original
contributions draw on rich theoretical, historical, comparative, cross-disciplinary and doctrinal perspectives. This is truly a landmark publication in private law, with no counterpart in the common law world.
Contributors: Professor Rick Bigwood; Professor Michael Bryan; Professor John Cartwright; Professor Mindy Chen-Wishart; Professor Simone Degeling; Professor Pamela Hanrahan; Professor Luke Harding;
Professor Matthew Harding; Professor Catharine MacMillan; Professor Hector MacQueen; Professor Donna Nagy; Justice Andrew Phang; Professor Pauline Ridge; Professor Andrew Robertson; Ms Anna Williams.
Elise Bant
is Professor of Private Law and Commercial Regulation at The University of Western Australia and Professorial Fellow at Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne.
Jeannie Paterson
is Professor of Law at Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne.
Oct 2020 | 9781509929252 | 384pp | Hbk | RSP:
£95
Discount Price: £76
Order online at
www.hartpublishing.co.uk – use the code UG6 at the checkout to
get 20% off your order!
Law, Policy and Practice
Edited by Sinéad Agnew, Paul S Davies and Charles Mitchell
State pensions are the largest item in the UK social security budget, costing £96.7 billion in 2017/18. In the same year, 45.6 million people were members of UK occupational pension schemes
(out of a total population of 66.4 million) and the total amount saved into workplace schemes in 2018 was £90.4 billion. A consequence of the pensions sector’s large size has been that pensions law and social security law have become increasingly specialised
areas of practice. Yet despite their social and economic importance and the fascinating legal issues they generate, pensions have not been the subject of sustained academic attention. This book starts to fill this gap by initiating a dialogue between practitioners
and scholars working on pensions law and policy, groups who have much to learn from one another.
Sinéad Agnew
is Lecturer in Property Law, Paul S Davies
is Professor of Commercial Law and Charles Mitchell is Professor of Law, all at University College London.
Aug 2020 | 9781509922703 | 416pp | Hbk | RSP:
£100
Discount Price: £80
Order online at
www.hartpublishing.co.uk – use the code UG6 at the checkout to
get 20% off your order!
Jason Neyers
Professor of Law
Faculty of Law
Western University
Law Building Rm 26
e. jneyers@uwo.ca
t. 519.661.2111 (x88435)