Andrews on civil processes, Volume II, Arbitration & mediation:
In two volumes Neil Andrews (University of Cambridge) examines civil processes in England and Wales. One of the leading legal jurisdictions in this area of law as many non-resident parties choose to conduct arbitration in London or bring proceedings before the English High Court, notably the Commerc...
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge
Intersentia
2013
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | BSB01 UBG01 Volltext |
Zusammenfassung: | In two volumes Neil Andrews (University of Cambridge) examines civil processes in England and Wales. One of the leading legal jurisdictions in this area of law as many non-resident parties choose to conduct arbitration in London or bring proceedings before the English High Court, notably the Commercial Court. Written in a clear and well-ordered style, Andrews on Civil Processes therefore discusses the most important styles of civil dispute resolution: court proceedings (volume 1), mediation and arbitration (volume 2).Neil Andrews guides the reader through the practice of dispute resolution in all its major forms: public and private, adjudicative and conciliatory. The subject-matter has been split into two volumes to provide specialists with a choice, but the two volumes are of course complementary. They provide a complete picture of the court and arbitration systems, and of the developing technique of mediation. Advisors seeking further leads are also assisted by detailed citation of primary sources and rich bibliographical references.Volume 1: Court ProceedingsIn England there has been a sustained effort to control court proceedings and render them more efficient. The author explores common legal principles and connections between the court system and the alternative techniques of arbitration and mediation. For example, there is discussion of: the four forms of civil justice (chapter 1: mediation, settlement without mediation, arbitration, and court proceedings); the six phases of court proceedings (chapter 4); the four forms of English multi-party litigation (chapter 22); and the five constellations of procedural principle - advice and access, empowering the parties, conditions for sound decision-making, an efficient process, a fair process, and upholding judgment (chapters 25 to 29).Most recently, reform of costs was examined by Lord Justice Jackson's inquiry in 2009-10. This 2013 publication takes the complex set of reforms and changes introduced in April 2013 into account and provides detailed discussion where relevant (inter alia. qualified one way cost shifting, damages-based agreements, and the changes to conditional fee agreements and the system of settlement offers). A convenient survey of these changes is also set out in the introductory chapter of volume 1.'English civil procedure has undergone significant changes over the past few years. The Jackson reforms were the final piece in the jigsaw in what had already been a significantly changed procedural landscape. Against this background it is of a paramount importance to keep reference works up-to-date in order to give one a clear picture of where we stand. The new book, Andrews on Civil Processes, published in 2013, was designed to fill in the gap between recent developments and scholarly works in the field. This goal was squarely achieved. |
Beschreibung: | Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Jan 2018) |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource (xxiii, 429 pages) |
ISBN: | 9781780685106 |
DOI: | 10.1017/9781780685106 |
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520 | |a In two volumes Neil Andrews (University of Cambridge) examines civil processes in England and Wales. One of the leading legal jurisdictions in this area of law as many non-resident parties choose to conduct arbitration in London or bring proceedings before the English High Court, notably the Commercial Court. Written in a clear and well-ordered style, Andrews on Civil Processes therefore discusses the most important styles of civil dispute resolution: court proceedings (volume 1), mediation and arbitration (volume 2).Neil Andrews guides the reader through the practice of dispute resolution in all its major forms: public and private, adjudicative and conciliatory. The subject-matter has been split into two volumes to provide specialists with a choice, but the two volumes are of course complementary. They provide a complete picture of the court and arbitration systems, and of the developing technique of mediation. | ||
520 | |a Advisors seeking further leads are also assisted by detailed citation of primary sources and rich bibliographical references.Volume 1: Court ProceedingsIn England there has been a sustained effort to control court proceedings and render them more efficient. The author explores common legal principles and connections between the court system and the alternative techniques of arbitration and mediation. For example, there is discussion of: the four forms of civil justice (chapter 1: mediation, settlement without mediation, arbitration, and court proceedings); the six phases of court proceedings (chapter 4); the four forms of English multi-party litigation (chapter 22); and the five constellations of procedural principle - advice and access, empowering the parties, conditions for sound decision-making, an efficient process, a fair process, and upholding judgment (chapters 25 to 29).Most recently, reform of costs was examined by Lord Justice Jackson's inquiry in 2009-10. | ||
520 | |a This 2013 publication takes the complex set of reforms and changes introduced in April 2013 into account and provides detailed discussion where relevant (inter alia. qualified one way cost shifting, damages-based agreements, and the changes to conditional fee agreements and the system of settlement offers). A convenient survey of these changes is also set out in the introductory chapter of volume 1.'English civil procedure has undergone significant changes over the past few years. The Jackson reforms were the final piece in the jigsaw in what had already been a significantly changed procedural landscape. Against this background it is of a paramount importance to keep reference works up-to-date in order to give one a clear picture of where we stand. The new book, Andrews on Civil Processes, published in 2013, was designed to fill in the gap between recent developments and scholarly works in the field. This goal was squarely achieved. | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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any_adam_object | |
author | Andrews, Neil , (Barrister) |
author_facet | Andrews, Neil , (Barrister) |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Andrews, Neil , (Barrister) |
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building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV045211033 |
collection | ZDB-20-CBO |
ctrlnum | (ZDB-20-CBO)CR9781780685106 (OCoLC)1029056712 (DE-599)BVBBV045211033 |
dewey-full | 347.42 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 347 - Procedure and courts |
dewey-raw | 347.42 |
dewey-search | 347.42 |
dewey-sort | 3347.42 |
dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
doi_str_mv | 10.1017/9781780685106 |
format | Electronic eBook |
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institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781780685106 |
language | English |
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spelling | Andrews, Neil , (Barrister) Verfasser aut Andrews on civil processes, Volume II, Arbitration & mediation Neil Andrews Cambridge Intersentia 2013 1 online resource (xxiii, 429 pages) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Jan 2018) In two volumes Neil Andrews (University of Cambridge) examines civil processes in England and Wales. One of the leading legal jurisdictions in this area of law as many non-resident parties choose to conduct arbitration in London or bring proceedings before the English High Court, notably the Commercial Court. Written in a clear and well-ordered style, Andrews on Civil Processes therefore discusses the most important styles of civil dispute resolution: court proceedings (volume 1), mediation and arbitration (volume 2).Neil Andrews guides the reader through the practice of dispute resolution in all its major forms: public and private, adjudicative and conciliatory. The subject-matter has been split into two volumes to provide specialists with a choice, but the two volumes are of course complementary. They provide a complete picture of the court and arbitration systems, and of the developing technique of mediation. Advisors seeking further leads are also assisted by detailed citation of primary sources and rich bibliographical references.Volume 1: Court ProceedingsIn England there has been a sustained effort to control court proceedings and render them more efficient. The author explores common legal principles and connections between the court system and the alternative techniques of arbitration and mediation. For example, there is discussion of: the four forms of civil justice (chapter 1: mediation, settlement without mediation, arbitration, and court proceedings); the six phases of court proceedings (chapter 4); the four forms of English multi-party litigation (chapter 22); and the five constellations of procedural principle - advice and access, empowering the parties, conditions for sound decision-making, an efficient process, a fair process, and upholding judgment (chapters 25 to 29).Most recently, reform of costs was examined by Lord Justice Jackson's inquiry in 2009-10. This 2013 publication takes the complex set of reforms and changes introduced in April 2013 into account and provides detailed discussion where relevant (inter alia. qualified one way cost shifting, damages-based agreements, and the changes to conditional fee agreements and the system of settlement offers). A convenient survey of these changes is also set out in the introductory chapter of volume 1.'English civil procedure has undergone significant changes over the past few years. The Jackson reforms were the final piece in the jigsaw in what had already been a significantly changed procedural landscape. Against this background it is of a paramount importance to keep reference works up-to-date in order to give one a clear picture of where we stand. The new book, Andrews on Civil Processes, published in 2013, was designed to fill in the gap between recent developments and scholarly works in the field. This goal was squarely achieved. Civil procedure England Civil procedure Wales Mediation England Mediation Wales Conduct of court proceedings England Conduct of court proceedings Wales Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe 9781780681252 https://doi.org/10.1017/9781780685106 Verlag URL des Erstveröffentlichers Volltext |
spellingShingle | Andrews, Neil , (Barrister) Andrews on civil processes, Volume II, Arbitration & mediation Civil procedure England Civil procedure Wales Mediation England Mediation Wales Conduct of court proceedings England Conduct of court proceedings Wales |
title | Andrews on civil processes, Volume II, Arbitration & mediation |
title_auth | Andrews on civil processes, Volume II, Arbitration & mediation |
title_exact_search | Andrews on civil processes, Volume II, Arbitration & mediation |
title_full | Andrews on civil processes, Volume II, Arbitration & mediation Neil Andrews |
title_fullStr | Andrews on civil processes, Volume II, Arbitration & mediation Neil Andrews |
title_full_unstemmed | Andrews on civil processes, Volume II, Arbitration & mediation Neil Andrews |
title_short | Andrews on civil processes, Volume II, Arbitration & mediation |
title_sort | andrews on civil processes volume ii arbitration mediation |
topic | Civil procedure England Civil procedure Wales Mediation England Mediation Wales Conduct of court proceedings England Conduct of court proceedings Wales |
topic_facet | Civil procedure England Civil procedure Wales Mediation England Mediation Wales Conduct of court proceedings England Conduct of court proceedings Wales |
url | https://doi.org/10.1017/9781780685106 |
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