Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Transactions: Global Perspectives and Applications
This book looks at the historical use of allegations of unconscionable conduct within the context of independent trade finance instruments, such as letters of credit and demand guarantees. It makes a detailed survey of the law of unconscionable conduct, the complexities of the doctrine of independen...
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
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Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Cambridge Scholars Publisher
2018
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Online-Zugang: | HWR01 |
Zusammenfassung: | This book looks at the historical use of allegations of unconscionable conduct within the context of independent trade finance instruments, such as letters of credit and demand guarantees. It makes a detailed survey of the law of unconscionable conduct, the complexities of the doctrine of independence, and the circumstances where the former prevails to provide relief from abuse.It also completes a wide-ranging, sequential audit of the relevant case law in both Singapore and Australia where unconscionable conduct was alleged in independent instrument matters. The audit examines every case along the lines of precedent and details the contribution each makes to the law.Focussing on the jurisdictions of Singapore, Australia, and Malaysia, the book lays out the case for the broad adoption of unconscionable conduct in this domain. With its premises founded in precedent and statute, it describes the elements of independent instrument unconscionability as already laid down in law and links it to international banking practice |
Beschreibung: | Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (291 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9781527520905 |
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505 | 8 | |a Intro -- Table of Contents -- List of Figures and Tables -- Abstract -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter One -- Section A. Legal Issue and Investigative Approaches -- 1.0. Research Question -- 2.0. Hypothesis -- 3.0. Rationale -- Section B. Research Contribution, Assumptions and Methodology -- 1.0. Contribution to the Body of Knowledge -- 2.0. Caveat Regarding Reader's Prior Knowledge -- 3.0. Methodology -- Section C. Terminology, Syntax and Vocabulary -- 1.0. Usage in This Document -- 2.0. Independent Instrument Naming Conventions -- 3.0. The 'Contractual' Nature of Independent Instruments -- 4.0. Referencing, Punctuation and Grammar -- Section D. The Argument for Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- Section E. Chapter Summary -- Chapter Two -- Section A. The Independence Principle -- 1.0. The Independence Principle in Context -- 2.0. Nomenclature of 'Independence' and 'Autonomy' -- 3.0. Theoretical Foundations for the Independence Principle -- 4.0. Legal Regimes Grounding the Independence Principle -- 5.0. The Independence Principle in Documentary Credit Rule Sets -- 6.0. Case Law on Independent Instrument Inde -- 7.0. Risk Allocation -- Section B. Exceptions to Independence: Fraud and Illegality -- 1.0. Fraud in Brief -- 2.0. Illegality in Brief -- Section C. Summary of the Independence Principle and Exceptions -- Chapter Three -- Section A. Introduction to Unconscionable Conduct -- Section B . Theoretical Foundations of Unconscionable Conduct -- 1.0. Equity and the Development of Unconscionability -- 2.0. Australian Statutory Unconscionability -- 3.0. Procedural and Substantive Unconscionability -- 4.0. Framing the Doctrine of Unconscionable C -- 5.0. Categorising Unconscionable Conduct -- 6.0. Independent Instruments and Unconscionability Law -- 7.0. Findings on Unconscionability | |
505 | 8 | |a Section C. Theoretical Foundations of the Unconscionability Exception -- 1.0. Analysis of the Exception -- Chapter Four -- Section A. The Unconscionability Exception in Singapore -- 1.0. Introduction -- Section B. The Unconscionability Exception in Singapore's Courts -- 1.0. Case Analyses-Singapore -- 2.0. Conclusion to Singaporean Case Analyses -- Chapter Five -- Section A. The Unconscionability Exception in Australia -- 1.0. Introduction and Context -- 2.0. Case Analyses-Australia -- 3.0. Conclusion to Australian Case Analyses -- Chapter Six -- Section A. A New Category of Unconscionable Conduct -- 1.0. Theoretical Rationale for Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- 2.0. Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- 3.0. Elements of Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- 4.0. Summary of the Characteristics of Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- Bibliography | |
520 | |a This book looks at the historical use of allegations of unconscionable conduct within the context of independent trade finance instruments, such as letters of credit and demand guarantees. It makes a detailed survey of the law of unconscionable conduct, the complexities of the doctrine of independence, and the circumstances where the former prevails to provide relief from abuse.It also completes a wide-ranging, sequential audit of the relevant case law in both Singapore and Australia where unconscionable conduct was alleged in independent instrument matters. The audit examines every case along the lines of precedent and details the contribution each makes to the law.Focussing on the jurisdictions of Singapore, Australia, and Malaysia, the book lays out the case for the broad adoption of unconscionable conduct in this domain. With its premises founded in precedent and statute, it describes the elements of independent instrument unconscionability as already laid down in law and links it to international banking practice | ||
650 | 4 | |a Unconscionable contracts | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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author | Wooler, Garth |
author_facet | Wooler, Garth |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Wooler, Garth |
author_variant | g w gw |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV047697737 |
collection | ZDB-30-PQE |
contents | Intro -- Table of Contents -- List of Figures and Tables -- Abstract -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter One -- Section A. Legal Issue and Investigative Approaches -- 1.0. Research Question -- 2.0. Hypothesis -- 3.0. Rationale -- Section B. Research Contribution, Assumptions and Methodology -- 1.0. Contribution to the Body of Knowledge -- 2.0. Caveat Regarding Reader's Prior Knowledge -- 3.0. Methodology -- Section C. Terminology, Syntax and Vocabulary -- 1.0. Usage in This Document -- 2.0. Independent Instrument Naming Conventions -- 3.0. The 'Contractual' Nature of Independent Instruments -- 4.0. Referencing, Punctuation and Grammar -- Section D. The Argument for Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- Section E. Chapter Summary -- Chapter Two -- Section A. The Independence Principle -- 1.0. The Independence Principle in Context -- 2.0. Nomenclature of 'Independence' and 'Autonomy' -- 3.0. Theoretical Foundations for the Independence Principle -- 4.0. Legal Regimes Grounding the Independence Principle -- 5.0. The Independence Principle in Documentary Credit Rule Sets -- 6.0. Case Law on Independent Instrument Inde -- 7.0. Risk Allocation -- Section B. Exceptions to Independence: Fraud and Illegality -- 1.0. Fraud in Brief -- 2.0. Illegality in Brief -- Section C. Summary of the Independence Principle and Exceptions -- Chapter Three -- Section A. Introduction to Unconscionable Conduct -- Section B . Theoretical Foundations of Unconscionable Conduct -- 1.0. Equity and the Development of Unconscionability -- 2.0. Australian Statutory Unconscionability -- 3.0. Procedural and Substantive Unconscionability -- 4.0. Framing the Doctrine of Unconscionable C -- 5.0. Categorising Unconscionable Conduct -- 6.0. Independent Instruments and Unconscionability Law -- 7.0. Findings on Unconscionability Section C. Theoretical Foundations of the Unconscionability Exception -- 1.0. Analysis of the Exception -- Chapter Four -- Section A. The Unconscionability Exception in Singapore -- 1.0. Introduction -- Section B. The Unconscionability Exception in Singapore's Courts -- 1.0. Case Analyses-Singapore -- 2.0. Conclusion to Singaporean Case Analyses -- Chapter Five -- Section A. The Unconscionability Exception in Australia -- 1.0. Introduction and Context -- 2.0. Case Analyses-Australia -- 3.0. Conclusion to Australian Case Analyses -- Chapter Six -- Section A. A New Category of Unconscionable Conduct -- 1.0. Theoretical Rationale for Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- 2.0. Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- 3.0. Elements of Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- 4.0. Summary of the Characteristics of Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- Bibliography |
ctrlnum | (ZDB-30-PQE)EBC5584064 (ZDB-30-PAD)EBC5584064 (ZDB-89-EBL)EBL5584064 (OCoLC)1062396073 (DE-599)BVBBV047697737 |
dewey-full | 346.7302 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 346 - Private law |
dewey-raw | 346.7302 |
dewey-search | 346.7302 |
dewey-sort | 3346.7302 |
dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
discipline_str_mv | Rechtswissenschaft |
format | Electronic eBook |
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illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T18:58:07Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:19:26Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781527520905 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-033081701 |
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physical | 1 Online-Ressource (291 Seiten) |
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spelling | Wooler, Garth Verfasser aut Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Transactions Global Perspectives and Applications Newcastle-upon-Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publisher 2018 ©2018 1 Online-Ressource (291 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources Intro -- Table of Contents -- List of Figures and Tables -- Abstract -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter One -- Section A. Legal Issue and Investigative Approaches -- 1.0. Research Question -- 2.0. Hypothesis -- 3.0. Rationale -- Section B. Research Contribution, Assumptions and Methodology -- 1.0. Contribution to the Body of Knowledge -- 2.0. Caveat Regarding Reader's Prior Knowledge -- 3.0. Methodology -- Section C. Terminology, Syntax and Vocabulary -- 1.0. Usage in This Document -- 2.0. Independent Instrument Naming Conventions -- 3.0. The 'Contractual' Nature of Independent Instruments -- 4.0. Referencing, Punctuation and Grammar -- Section D. The Argument for Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- Section E. Chapter Summary -- Chapter Two -- Section A. The Independence Principle -- 1.0. The Independence Principle in Context -- 2.0. Nomenclature of 'Independence' and 'Autonomy' -- 3.0. Theoretical Foundations for the Independence Principle -- 4.0. Legal Regimes Grounding the Independence Principle -- 5.0. The Independence Principle in Documentary Credit Rule Sets -- 6.0. Case Law on Independent Instrument Inde -- 7.0. Risk Allocation -- Section B. Exceptions to Independence: Fraud and Illegality -- 1.0. Fraud in Brief -- 2.0. Illegality in Brief -- Section C. Summary of the Independence Principle and Exceptions -- Chapter Three -- Section A. Introduction to Unconscionable Conduct -- Section B . Theoretical Foundations of Unconscionable Conduct -- 1.0. Equity and the Development of Unconscionability -- 2.0. Australian Statutory Unconscionability -- 3.0. Procedural and Substantive Unconscionability -- 4.0. Framing the Doctrine of Unconscionable C -- 5.0. Categorising Unconscionable Conduct -- 6.0. Independent Instruments and Unconscionability Law -- 7.0. Findings on Unconscionability Section C. Theoretical Foundations of the Unconscionability Exception -- 1.0. Analysis of the Exception -- Chapter Four -- Section A. The Unconscionability Exception in Singapore -- 1.0. Introduction -- Section B. The Unconscionability Exception in Singapore's Courts -- 1.0. Case Analyses-Singapore -- 2.0. Conclusion to Singaporean Case Analyses -- Chapter Five -- Section A. The Unconscionability Exception in Australia -- 1.0. Introduction and Context -- 2.0. Case Analyses-Australia -- 3.0. Conclusion to Australian Case Analyses -- Chapter Six -- Section A. A New Category of Unconscionable Conduct -- 1.0. Theoretical Rationale for Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- 2.0. Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- 3.0. Elements of Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- 4.0. Summary of the Characteristics of Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- Bibliography This book looks at the historical use of allegations of unconscionable conduct within the context of independent trade finance instruments, such as letters of credit and demand guarantees. It makes a detailed survey of the law of unconscionable conduct, the complexities of the doctrine of independence, and the circumstances where the former prevails to provide relief from abuse.It also completes a wide-ranging, sequential audit of the relevant case law in both Singapore and Australia where unconscionable conduct was alleged in independent instrument matters. The audit examines every case along the lines of precedent and details the contribution each makes to the law.Focussing on the jurisdictions of Singapore, Australia, and Malaysia, the book lays out the case for the broad adoption of unconscionable conduct in this domain. With its premises founded in precedent and statute, it describes the elements of independent instrument unconscionability as already laid down in law and links it to international banking practice Unconscionable contracts Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Wooler, Garth Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Transactions Newcastle-upon-Tyne : Cambridge Scholars Publisher,c2018 |
spellingShingle | Wooler, Garth Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Transactions Global Perspectives and Applications Intro -- Table of Contents -- List of Figures and Tables -- Abstract -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter One -- Section A. Legal Issue and Investigative Approaches -- 1.0. Research Question -- 2.0. Hypothesis -- 3.0. Rationale -- Section B. Research Contribution, Assumptions and Methodology -- 1.0. Contribution to the Body of Knowledge -- 2.0. Caveat Regarding Reader's Prior Knowledge -- 3.0. Methodology -- Section C. Terminology, Syntax and Vocabulary -- 1.0. Usage in This Document -- 2.0. Independent Instrument Naming Conventions -- 3.0. The 'Contractual' Nature of Independent Instruments -- 4.0. Referencing, Punctuation and Grammar -- Section D. The Argument for Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- Section E. Chapter Summary -- Chapter Two -- Section A. The Independence Principle -- 1.0. The Independence Principle in Context -- 2.0. Nomenclature of 'Independence' and 'Autonomy' -- 3.0. Theoretical Foundations for the Independence Principle -- 4.0. Legal Regimes Grounding the Independence Principle -- 5.0. The Independence Principle in Documentary Credit Rule Sets -- 6.0. Case Law on Independent Instrument Inde -- 7.0. Risk Allocation -- Section B. Exceptions to Independence: Fraud and Illegality -- 1.0. Fraud in Brief -- 2.0. Illegality in Brief -- Section C. Summary of the Independence Principle and Exceptions -- Chapter Three -- Section A. Introduction to Unconscionable Conduct -- Section B . Theoretical Foundations of Unconscionable Conduct -- 1.0. Equity and the Development of Unconscionability -- 2.0. Australian Statutory Unconscionability -- 3.0. Procedural and Substantive Unconscionability -- 4.0. Framing the Doctrine of Unconscionable C -- 5.0. Categorising Unconscionable Conduct -- 6.0. Independent Instruments and Unconscionability Law -- 7.0. Findings on Unconscionability Section C. Theoretical Foundations of the Unconscionability Exception -- 1.0. Analysis of the Exception -- Chapter Four -- Section A. The Unconscionability Exception in Singapore -- 1.0. Introduction -- Section B. The Unconscionability Exception in Singapore's Courts -- 1.0. Case Analyses-Singapore -- 2.0. Conclusion to Singaporean Case Analyses -- Chapter Five -- Section A. The Unconscionability Exception in Australia -- 1.0. Introduction and Context -- 2.0. Case Analyses-Australia -- 3.0. Conclusion to Australian Case Analyses -- Chapter Six -- Section A. A New Category of Unconscionable Conduct -- 1.0. Theoretical Rationale for Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- 2.0. Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- 3.0. Elements of Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- 4.0. Summary of the Characteristics of Independent Instrument Unconscionability -- Bibliography Unconscionable contracts |
title | Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Transactions Global Perspectives and Applications |
title_auth | Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Transactions Global Perspectives and Applications |
title_exact_search | Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Transactions Global Perspectives and Applications |
title_exact_search_txtP | Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Transactions Global Perspectives and Applications |
title_full | Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Transactions Global Perspectives and Applications |
title_fullStr | Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Transactions Global Perspectives and Applications |
title_full_unstemmed | Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Transactions Global Perspectives and Applications |
title_short | Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Transactions |
title_sort | unconscionable conduct in commercial transactions global perspectives and applications |
title_sub | Global Perspectives and Applications |
topic | Unconscionable contracts |
topic_facet | Unconscionable contracts |
work_keys_str_mv | AT woolergarth unconscionableconductincommercialtransactionsglobalperspectivesandapplications |