Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOOKs | National Law School | Reference | General Stacks | 346.002201 BEN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 38624 |
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Introduction
Part One: Principles;
A. Formation;
1. Consideration: Its Meaning, Role, and Consequences;
2. Offer and Acceptance, the Objective Test, and Contractual Intent;
3. Implication;
B. Fairness;
4. The Paradigm of Contractual Fairness: The Principle of Unconscionability;
5. Three Other Doctrines about Fair Terms;
6. Fairness and Assent in Standard Form Contracts;
C. Enforcement;
7. Fundamental Ideas;
8. Unity and Diversity in the Law of Contract Remedies;
9. Expectation Damages and Contract Theory;
Part Two: Theory;
10. Contract as a Transfer of Ownership;
11. A Moral Basis for Contract as Transfer;
12. The Stability of Contract as Transfer;
Notes;
Table of Cases;
Acknowledgments;
Index
This book seeks to provide a moral basis for contract law that can not only make sense of its main doctrines in their own terms but also bring out the distinct conception of justice that actually animates them. The author shows in detail that this conception of justice is purely transactional and non-distributive in character but at the same time that it fits within a larger framework of liberal justice that includes robust principles of distributive justice such as Rawls's. Even though the focus of the work is on the common law of contract, the proposed theory bears on the justification of modern contract law in other legal traditions as well, such as the civil law.-- Provided by publisher
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