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Implicit dimensions of contract : discrete, relational, and network contracts / edited by David Campbell, Hugh Collins, John Wightman
Implicit dimensions of contract : discrete, relational, and network contracts / edited by David Campbell, Hugh Collins, John Wightman
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Oxford ; Portland, Oregon, : Hart Publishing, 2003
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (410 p.)
Disciplina 346.02
Collana International studies in the theory of private law
Soggetto topico Contracts
Contracts - Philosophy
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-4725-5944-4
1-281-16568-9
9786611165680
1-84731-217-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto List of Contributors -- 1. Introduction: The Research Agenda of Implicit Dimensions of Contracts -- Hugh Collins -- 2. Discovering the Implicit Dimensions of Contracts -- David Campbell and Hugh Collins -- 3. The Real and the Paper Deal: Empirical Pictures of Relationships,Complexity and the Urge for Transparent Simple Rules -- Stewart Macaulay -- 4. After Investors: Interpretation, Expectation and the Implicit Dimension of the 'New Contextualism' -- Roger Brownsword -- 5. Beyond Custom: Contract, Contexts, and the Recognition of Implicit Understandings -- John Wightman -- 6. A Comparison of British and American Attitudes Towards the Exercise of Judicial Discretion in Contract Law -- William C Whitford -- 7. Reflections on Relational Contract Theory after a Neo-classical Seminar -- Ian R Macneil -- 8. Discretionary Powers in Contracts -- Hugh Collins -- 9. Recontractualising the Corporation: Implicit Contract as Ideology -- Paddy Ireland -- 10. Implicit Contracts, Takeovers, and Corporate Governance: In the Shadow of the City Code -- Simon Deakin, Richard Hobbs, David Nash and Giles Slinger -- 11. Expertise as Social Institution: Internalising Third Parties into the Contract -- Gunther Teubner -- 12. Implicit Dimensions of Contract and the Oppression of Minority Shareholders -- Christopher Riley -- Index -- CONTENTS: Introduction: Hugh Collins (LSE); The Real Deal and the Paper Deal: Empirical Pictures, Complexity, and the Urge for the Magic of Transparent, Simple Rules: Stewart Macaulay (Wisconsin); Beyond Custom: Contract, Contexts, and the Recognition of Implicit Understandings: John Wightman (Kent); After Investors: Interpretation, Expectation and the Implicit Ethic of Contract: Roger Brownsword (Sheffield); The Want of Consideration for Fairness: David Campbell (Cardiff); A Comparison of British and American Attitudes Towards the Exercise of Judicial Discretion in Contract Law: William Whitford (Wisconsin); Discretionary Powers in Contracts: Hugh Collins (LSE); Expertise as Social Institution: Internalising Third Parties into the Contract: Gunther Teubner (Frankfurt); Implicit Contracts and the Corporation: Paddy Ireland (Kent); How Do, and How Should, Courts Deal with Implicit Contracts? Lessons from the Corporate Context: Chris Riley (Durham); Implicit Contracts and the Evolution of Corporate Governance: The Case of the City Code on Takeovers and Mergers: Simon Deakin, Richard Hobbs,David Nash and Giles Slinger (Cambridge University); Reflections on Relational Contract Theory after a Neo-classical Seminar: Ian Macneil (Northwestern)
Record Nr. UNINA-9910451338103321
Oxford ; Portland, Oregon, : Hart Publishing, 2003
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Implicit dimensions of contract : discrete, relational, and network contracts / edited by David Campbell, Hugh Collins, John Wightman
Implicit dimensions of contract : discrete, relational, and network contracts / edited by David Campbell, Hugh Collins, John Wightman
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Oxford ; Portland, Oregon, : Hart Publishing, 2003
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (410 p.)
Disciplina 346.02
Collana International studies in the theory of private law
Soggetto topico Contracts
Contracts - Philosophy
ISBN 1-4725-5944-4
1-281-16568-9
9786611165680
1-84731-217-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto List of Contributors -- 1. Introduction: The Research Agenda of Implicit Dimensions of Contracts -- Hugh Collins -- 2. Discovering the Implicit Dimensions of Contracts -- David Campbell and Hugh Collins -- 3. The Real and the Paper Deal: Empirical Pictures of Relationships,Complexity and the Urge for Transparent Simple Rules -- Stewart Macaulay -- 4. After Investors: Interpretation, Expectation and the Implicit Dimension of the 'New Contextualism' -- Roger Brownsword -- 5. Beyond Custom: Contract, Contexts, and the Recognition of Implicit Understandings -- John Wightman -- 6. A Comparison of British and American Attitudes Towards the Exercise of Judicial Discretion in Contract Law -- William C Whitford -- 7. Reflections on Relational Contract Theory after a Neo-classical Seminar -- Ian R Macneil -- 8. Discretionary Powers in Contracts -- Hugh Collins -- 9. Recontractualising the Corporation: Implicit Contract as Ideology -- Paddy Ireland -- 10. Implicit Contracts, Takeovers, and Corporate Governance: In the Shadow of the City Code -- Simon Deakin, Richard Hobbs, David Nash and Giles Slinger -- 11. Expertise as Social Institution: Internalising Third Parties into the Contract -- Gunther Teubner -- 12. Implicit Dimensions of Contract and the Oppression of Minority Shareholders -- Christopher Riley -- Index -- CONTENTS: Introduction: Hugh Collins (LSE); The Real Deal and the Paper Deal: Empirical Pictures, Complexity, and the Urge for the Magic of Transparent, Simple Rules: Stewart Macaulay (Wisconsin); Beyond Custom: Contract, Contexts, and the Recognition of Implicit Understandings: John Wightman (Kent); After Investors: Interpretation, Expectation and the Implicit Ethic of Contract: Roger Brownsword (Sheffield); The Want of Consideration for Fairness: David Campbell (Cardiff); A Comparison of British and American Attitudes Towards the Exercise of Judicial Discretion in Contract Law: William Whitford (Wisconsin); Discretionary Powers in Contracts: Hugh Collins (LSE); Expertise as Social Institution: Internalising Third Parties into the Contract: Gunther Teubner (Frankfurt); Implicit Contracts and the Corporation: Paddy Ireland (Kent); How Do, and How Should, Courts Deal with Implicit Contracts? Lessons from the Corporate Context: Chris Riley (Durham); Implicit Contracts and the Evolution of Corporate Governance: The Case of the City Code on Takeovers and Mergers: Simon Deakin, Richard Hobbs,David Nash and Giles Slinger (Cambridge University); Reflections on Relational Contract Theory after a Neo-classical Seminar: Ian Macneil (Northwestern)
Record Nr. UNINA-9910784279203321
Oxford ; Portland, Oregon, : Hart Publishing, 2003
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Implicit dimensions of contract : discrete, relational, and network contracts / edited by David Campbell, Hugh Collins, John Wightman
Implicit dimensions of contract : discrete, relational, and network contracts / edited by David Campbell, Hugh Collins, John Wightman
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Oxford ; Portland, Oregon, : Hart Publishing, 2003
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (410 p.)
Disciplina 346.02
Collana International studies in the theory of private law
Soggetto topico Contracts
Contracts - Philosophy
ISBN 1-4725-5944-4
1-281-16568-9
9786611165680
1-84731-217-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto List of Contributors -- 1. Introduction: The Research Agenda of Implicit Dimensions of Contracts -- Hugh Collins -- 2. Discovering the Implicit Dimensions of Contracts -- David Campbell and Hugh Collins -- 3. The Real and the Paper Deal: Empirical Pictures of Relationships,Complexity and the Urge for Transparent Simple Rules -- Stewart Macaulay -- 4. After Investors: Interpretation, Expectation and the Implicit Dimension of the 'New Contextualism' -- Roger Brownsword -- 5. Beyond Custom: Contract, Contexts, and the Recognition of Implicit Understandings -- John Wightman -- 6. A Comparison of British and American Attitudes Towards the Exercise of Judicial Discretion in Contract Law -- William C Whitford -- 7. Reflections on Relational Contract Theory after a Neo-classical Seminar -- Ian R Macneil -- 8. Discretionary Powers in Contracts -- Hugh Collins -- 9. Recontractualising the Corporation: Implicit Contract as Ideology -- Paddy Ireland -- 10. Implicit Contracts, Takeovers, and Corporate Governance: In the Shadow of the City Code -- Simon Deakin, Richard Hobbs, David Nash and Giles Slinger -- 11. Expertise as Social Institution: Internalising Third Parties into the Contract -- Gunther Teubner -- 12. Implicit Dimensions of Contract and the Oppression of Minority Shareholders -- Christopher Riley -- Index -- CONTENTS: Introduction: Hugh Collins (LSE); The Real Deal and the Paper Deal: Empirical Pictures, Complexity, and the Urge for the Magic of Transparent, Simple Rules: Stewart Macaulay (Wisconsin); Beyond Custom: Contract, Contexts, and the Recognition of Implicit Understandings: John Wightman (Kent); After Investors: Interpretation, Expectation and the Implicit Ethic of Contract: Roger Brownsword (Sheffield); The Want of Consideration for Fairness: David Campbell (Cardiff); A Comparison of British and American Attitudes Towards the Exercise of Judicial Discretion in Contract Law: William Whitford (Wisconsin); Discretionary Powers in Contracts: Hugh Collins (LSE); Expertise as Social Institution: Internalising Third Parties into the Contract: Gunther Teubner (Frankfurt); Implicit Contracts and the Corporation: Paddy Ireland (Kent); How Do, and How Should, Courts Deal with Implicit Contracts? Lessons from the Corporate Context: Chris Riley (Durham); Implicit Contracts and the Evolution of Corporate Governance: The Case of the City Code on Takeovers and Mergers: Simon Deakin, Richard Hobbs,David Nash and Giles Slinger (Cambridge University); Reflections on Relational Contract Theory after a Neo-classical Seminar: Ian Macneil (Northwestern)
Record Nr. UNINA-9910809629703321
Oxford ; Portland, Oregon, : Hart Publishing, 2003
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Networks as connected contracts / Gunther Teubner ; (translated by Michelle Everson) ; edited with an introduction by Hugh Collins
Networks as connected contracts / Gunther Teubner ; (translated by Michelle Everson) ; edited with an introduction by Hugh Collins
Autore Teubner Gunther
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Oxford, [England] ; Portland, OR, : Hart Publishing, 2011
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (315 p.)
Disciplina 346.02
Collana International studies in the theory of private law
Soggetto topico Computer networks - Law and legislation - Germany
Liability (Law) - Germany
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-84731-775-8
1-4725-6095-7
1-283-34025-9
9786613340252
1-84731-661-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Introduction to Networks as Connected Contracts by Hugh Collins -- 1 Between Market and Organisation -- 2 The Inadequacy of Legal Conceptions of Networks -- 3 Sociological Jurisprudence -- 4 The Distinctive Properties of Networks -- 5 The Challenge of Comparative Sociological Jurisprudence -- 6 The Concept of Connected Contracts -- 7 Network Effects on Interpretation of Bilateral Contracts -- 8 Internal Network Liability -- 9 External Network Liability -- 10 Conclusion -- Introduction: The Aims of Legal Analysis of Networks -- Chapter 1 -- The Network Revolution: New Risks - Unsolved Legal Issues -- I. Two 'Irritating' Legal Cases -- II. Appropriate Doctrinal Responses? -- III. Legally Relevant Networks -- IV. The New Economic Relevance of Pre-modern Networks -- V. Forms of Network and their Regulatory Problems -- VI. Specific Risks of Networks -- Chapter 2 -- Socio-economic Analyses and Legal Characterisation -- I. Market Regime: Networks as Contracts? -- II. Organisational Regime: Networks as Business Associations? -- III. Hybrid Regimes: Networks as Institutionalised Contradictions? -- IV. Communitarian Regime: Networks as 'Communities'? -- V. Mixed Regime: Networks as a Type of Mixed Contract? -- VI. Polycorporate Regime: Networks as Corporate Groups? -- VII. Idiosyncratic Regime: 'Network Contract' as a New Legal Concept? -- Chapter 3 -- Networks as Connected Contracts -- I. Generalisation of Connected Contracts and their Re-specification for Networks -- II. Structural and Functional Equivalances -- III. A Productive 'Unsustainable' Contradiction -- IV. The Legal Construct of Reality: the Dual Constitution as Contract and Association -- V. Legal Consequences: Selective Attribution to Contractual Partners and to the Network -- VI. Legal Problems of Institutionalised Networking -- Chapter 4 -- The Effects of Networks on Bilateral Contracts -- I. Differentiated Discounts -- II. Structural Contradiction: Bilateral Exchange versus Multilateral Connectivity -- III. The Purpose of the Network as the Yardstick for Duties of Loyalty -- IV. Selected Duties of Loyalty toward the Network -- V. Profit Sharing? -- VI. Risk Distribution? Network Purpose and the Judicial Review of Standard Form Contracts -- Chapter 5 -- Piercing Liability Within the Network: The Special Relationship between Members of the Network who Are Not Contractual Partners -- I. Free Riding in the Network -- II. Structural Contradiction: Competition versus Co-operation -- III. Piercing Within the Network? -- IV. Piercing Liability within Parallel Contracts -- V. Extra-Contractual Duties of Loyalty -- VI. Protective Obligations, Performance Obligations, Promotion Obligations -- VII. Analogies to Company Law: Derivative Action within the Contractual Network? -- VIII. Hierarchical Multilateral Network -- Chapter 6 -- External Liability of Networks: Expanding the Range of Responsibility -- I. Franchising in Services: 'Organised Irresponsibility' -- II. Structural Contradiction: Unitas Multiplex -- III. External Liability of Networks -- IV. Decentralised Network Liability -- V. Selected Constellations of Liability
Record Nr. UNINA-9910457220703321
Teubner Gunther  
Oxford, [England] ; Portland, OR, : Hart Publishing, 2011
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Networks as connected contracts / Gunther Teubner ; (translated by Michelle Everson) ; edited with an introduction by Hugh Collins
Networks as connected contracts / Gunther Teubner ; (translated by Michelle Everson) ; edited with an introduction by Hugh Collins
Autore Teubner Gunther
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Oxford, [England] ; Portland, OR, : Hart Publishing, 2011
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (315 p.)
Disciplina 346.02
Collana International studies in the theory of private law
Soggetto topico Computer networks - Law and legislation - Germany
Liability (Law) - Germany
ISBN 1-84731-775-8
1-4725-6095-7
1-283-34025-9
9786613340252
1-84731-661-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Introduction to Networks as Connected Contracts by Hugh Collins -- 1 Between Market and Organisation -- 2 The Inadequacy of Legal Conceptions of Networks -- 3 Sociological Jurisprudence -- 4 The Distinctive Properties of Networks -- 5 The Challenge of Comparative Sociological Jurisprudence -- 6 The Concept of Connected Contracts -- 7 Network Effects on Interpretation of Bilateral Contracts -- 8 Internal Network Liability -- 9 External Network Liability -- 10 Conclusion -- Introduction: The Aims of Legal Analysis of Networks -- Chapter 1 -- The Network Revolution: New Risks - Unsolved Legal Issues -- I. Two 'Irritating' Legal Cases -- II. Appropriate Doctrinal Responses? -- III. Legally Relevant Networks -- IV. The New Economic Relevance of Pre-modern Networks -- V. Forms of Network and their Regulatory Problems -- VI. Specific Risks of Networks -- Chapter 2 -- Socio-economic Analyses and Legal Characterisation -- I. Market Regime: Networks as Contracts? -- II. Organisational Regime: Networks as Business Associations? -- III. Hybrid Regimes: Networks as Institutionalised Contradictions? -- IV. Communitarian Regime: Networks as 'Communities'? -- V. Mixed Regime: Networks as a Type of Mixed Contract? -- VI. Polycorporate Regime: Networks as Corporate Groups? -- VII. Idiosyncratic Regime: 'Network Contract' as a New Legal Concept? -- Chapter 3 -- Networks as Connected Contracts -- I. Generalisation of Connected Contracts and their Re-specification for Networks -- II. Structural and Functional Equivalances -- III. A Productive 'Unsustainable' Contradiction -- IV. The Legal Construct of Reality: the Dual Constitution as Contract and Association -- V. Legal Consequences: Selective Attribution to Contractual Partners and to the Network -- VI. Legal Problems of Institutionalised Networking -- Chapter 4 -- The Effects of Networks on Bilateral Contracts -- I. Differentiated Discounts -- II. Structural Contradiction: Bilateral Exchange versus Multilateral Connectivity -- III. The Purpose of the Network as the Yardstick for Duties of Loyalty -- IV. Selected Duties of Loyalty toward the Network -- V. Profit Sharing? -- VI. Risk Distribution? Network Purpose and the Judicial Review of Standard Form Contracts -- Chapter 5 -- Piercing Liability Within the Network: The Special Relationship between Members of the Network who Are Not Contractual Partners -- I. Free Riding in the Network -- II. Structural Contradiction: Competition versus Co-operation -- III. Piercing Within the Network? -- IV. Piercing Liability within Parallel Contracts -- V. Extra-Contractual Duties of Loyalty -- VI. Protective Obligations, Performance Obligations, Promotion Obligations -- VII. Analogies to Company Law: Derivative Action within the Contractual Network? -- VIII. Hierarchical Multilateral Network -- Chapter 6 -- External Liability of Networks: Expanding the Range of Responsibility -- I. Franchising in Services: 'Organised Irresponsibility' -- II. Structural Contradiction: Unitas Multiplex -- III. External Liability of Networks -- IV. Decentralised Network Liability -- V. Selected Constellations of Liability
Record Nr. UNINA-9910781414503321
Teubner Gunther  
Oxford, [England] ; Portland, OR, : Hart Publishing, 2011
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Networks as connected contracts / Gunther Teubner ; (translated by Michelle Everson) ; edited with an introduction by Hugh Collins
Networks as connected contracts / Gunther Teubner ; (translated by Michelle Everson) ; edited with an introduction by Hugh Collins
Autore Teubner Gunther
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Oxford, [England] ; Portland, OR, : Hart Publishing, 2011
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (315 p.)
Disciplina 346.02
Collana International studies in the theory of private law
Soggetto topico Computer networks - Law and legislation - Germany
Liability (Law) - Germany
ISBN 1-84731-775-8
1-4725-6095-7
1-283-34025-9
9786613340252
1-84731-661-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Introduction to Networks as Connected Contracts by Hugh Collins -- 1 Between Market and Organisation -- 2 The Inadequacy of Legal Conceptions of Networks -- 3 Sociological Jurisprudence -- 4 The Distinctive Properties of Networks -- 5 The Challenge of Comparative Sociological Jurisprudence -- 6 The Concept of Connected Contracts -- 7 Network Effects on Interpretation of Bilateral Contracts -- 8 Internal Network Liability -- 9 External Network Liability -- 10 Conclusion -- Introduction: The Aims of Legal Analysis of Networks -- Chapter 1 -- The Network Revolution: New Risks - Unsolved Legal Issues -- I. Two 'Irritating' Legal Cases -- II. Appropriate Doctrinal Responses? -- III. Legally Relevant Networks -- IV. The New Economic Relevance of Pre-modern Networks -- V. Forms of Network and their Regulatory Problems -- VI. Specific Risks of Networks -- Chapter 2 -- Socio-economic Analyses and Legal Characterisation -- I. Market Regime: Networks as Contracts? -- II. Organisational Regime: Networks as Business Associations? -- III. Hybrid Regimes: Networks as Institutionalised Contradictions? -- IV. Communitarian Regime: Networks as 'Communities'? -- V. Mixed Regime: Networks as a Type of Mixed Contract? -- VI. Polycorporate Regime: Networks as Corporate Groups? -- VII. Idiosyncratic Regime: 'Network Contract' as a New Legal Concept? -- Chapter 3 -- Networks as Connected Contracts -- I. Generalisation of Connected Contracts and their Re-specification for Networks -- II. Structural and Functional Equivalances -- III. A Productive 'Unsustainable' Contradiction -- IV. The Legal Construct of Reality: the Dual Constitution as Contract and Association -- V. Legal Consequences: Selective Attribution to Contractual Partners and to the Network -- VI. Legal Problems of Institutionalised Networking -- Chapter 4 -- The Effects of Networks on Bilateral Contracts -- I. Differentiated Discounts -- II. Structural Contradiction: Bilateral Exchange versus Multilateral Connectivity -- III. The Purpose of the Network as the Yardstick for Duties of Loyalty -- IV. Selected Duties of Loyalty toward the Network -- V. Profit Sharing? -- VI. Risk Distribution? Network Purpose and the Judicial Review of Standard Form Contracts -- Chapter 5 -- Piercing Liability Within the Network: The Special Relationship between Members of the Network who Are Not Contractual Partners -- I. Free Riding in the Network -- II. Structural Contradiction: Competition versus Co-operation -- III. Piercing Within the Network? -- IV. Piercing Liability within Parallel Contracts -- V. Extra-Contractual Duties of Loyalty -- VI. Protective Obligations, Performance Obligations, Promotion Obligations -- VII. Analogies to Company Law: Derivative Action within the Contractual Network? -- VIII. Hierarchical Multilateral Network -- Chapter 6 -- External Liability of Networks: Expanding the Range of Responsibility -- I. Franchising in Services: 'Organised Irresponsibility' -- II. Structural Contradiction: Unitas Multiplex -- III. External Liability of Networks -- IV. Decentralised Network Liability -- V. Selected Constellations of Liability
Record Nr. UNINA-9910810856203321
Teubner Gunther  
Oxford, [England] ; Portland, OR, : Hart Publishing, 2011
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui