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Students Guide to the Law of Contract 5e (2022)

Students Guide to the Law of Contract 5e (2022)

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A proper understanding of the law of contract requires far more than the rote learning of principles extracted from cases. Contract law is a practical subject and students will understand it best by applying contractual principles to practical, life-like scenarios. 

Student’s Guide to the Law of Contract fosters such an approach. It is filled with examples, exercises and problem questions that increase gradually in level of complexity. This will enable students to engage actively with the learning material and facilitate discussion in study groups and during lectures. 

Student’s Guide to the Law of Contract can be used by lecturers as a primary teaching tool for undergraduate students to improve their students’ knowledge and understanding of basic contractual principles, develop their ability to reason and stimulate their interest in the subject. Likewise, students will find it useful as an aid, additional to lectures and more advanced contract law textbooks. 

Key Features and Benefits 

  • Written in an -easy-to-understand style
  • Contains examples and questions
  • Pull out mind map poster, providing an overview of the law of contract

 

 

Content

  • Preface to the fifth edition
  • Icon key 
  • List of Figures and Mind Maps 
  • Table of Cases 
  • Table of Statutes 
  • Chapter 1: Introduction to Contract Law
  • Chapter 2: Problem Solving and the Law of Contract
  • Chapter 3: Agreement
  • Chapter 4: Other Requirements for a Valid Contract
  • Chapter 5: Legality
  • Chapter 6: Contents of a Contract
  • Chapter 7: Parties to a Contract 
  • Chapter 8: Breach of Contract 
  • Chapter 9: Remedies for Breach of Contract 
  • Chapter 10: Mistake 
  • Chapter 11: Improperly Obtained Consensus 
  • Chapter 12: Transfer and Extinction of Obligations
  • Chapter 13: Additional Exercises
  • Glossary of Latin and Foreign Terms
  • Index

 

Interest / Benefit to

  • Lecturers, as a primary teaching tool for undergraduate students
  • Students, as an aid to existing lectures and textbooks

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