Buch, Englisch, 580 Seiten, Format (B × H): 158 mm x 227 mm, Gewicht: 884 g
Reihe: Current Legal Problems
Buch, Englisch, 580 Seiten, Format (B × H): 158 mm x 227 mm, Gewicht: 884 g
Reihe: Current Legal Problems
ISBN: 978-0-19-928539-6
Verlag: Oxford University Press
In keeping with the established reputation of this annual publication, it features leading academic figures including past and current OUP authors Conor Gearty, Ralph Wilde, Reinhard Zimmermann, Mark Freedland, and Catherine Redgewell
- Topics covered include Analytical Jurisprudence, Medical and Family Ethics, Private Law, Public International law, Human Rights, EU Law, Labour Law, and Biotechnology
The 58th volume of Current Legal Problems, like its predecessors, explores a wide variety of issues. The contributions range across Analytical Jurisprudence, Constitutional Law, Medical and Family Ethics, International Law, EU Law, Military Detention, English Criminal Law, Terrorism, Democracy, Human Rights, Civil Liberties, Media Expression, Feminism, Economic Theory, Corporate Law, Competition Regulation, Labour Law, Biotechnology, and Biodiversity.
Amongst the contributors to this volume are Daniel Farber, Conor Gearty, Ralph Wilde, Edwin Cameron, Jonathan Rogers, Robin Morse, Jo Bridgeman, Linda Mulcahy, Alison Diduck, Jo Shaw, James Penner, Vivienne Brown, John Armour, Reinhard Zimmermann, Michael Spence, Mark Freedland, and Catherine Redgewell. A companion volume containing the proceedings of UCL's annual inter-disciplinary colloquium is published each year under the umbrella title Current Legal Issues.
Contents
- Daniel A Farber: Unlawful Combatants: Military Detention, Terrorism, and the Rule of Law
- Conor Gearty: Human Rights in an Age of of Counter-terrorism: Injurious, Irrelevant, or Indispensible?
- Ralph Wilde: The Extra-territorial Application of the Human Rights Act
- Edwin Cameron: When Judges Fail Justice
- Jonathan Rogers: Prosecutors, Courts, and Conduct of the Accused which Engages a Qualified Human Right
- Robin Morse: Rights relating to Personality, Freedom of the Press, and Private International Law: Some Common Law Comments
- Jo Bridgeman: When Systems Fail: Parents, Children, and the Quality of Healthcare
- Linda Mulcahy: Feminist Fever? Cultures of Adversarialism in the Aftermath of the Woolf Reforms
- Alison Diduck: Shifting Familiarity
- Jo Shaw: Mainstreaming Equality and Diversity in European Union Law and Policy
- James Penner: Decent Burials for Dead Concepts
- Vivienne Brown: Rights, Liberties, and Duties: Reformulating Hohfeld's Scheme of Legal Relations?
- John Armour: Who should make Corporate Law? EC Legislation versus Regulatory Competition
- Reinhard Zimmermann: Consumer Contract Law and General Contract Law: The German Experience
- Michael Spence: The Mark as Expression/The Mark as Property
- Mark Freedland: Re-thinking the Personal Work Contract
- Catherine Redgwell: Biotechnology, Biodiversity, and International Law
Zielgruppe
This publication is of general interest to all legal scholars and practitioners of law. It will be found on the shelves of all well-stocked law libraries.




