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Browse Academy Publishing Online Catalogue
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This issue covers important arbitration-related court decisions reported in the period January to June 2023 from Singapore and noteworthy judgments from Hong Kong SAR and the UK. This issue also includes two fascinating articles, one on the current UK Law Commission review of the Arbitration Act 1996, and another on the evolution of the fair hearing rule in the Singapore Courts, as well as a case analysis on the June 2023 Paris Court of Appeal decision on the Heirs to the Sultanate of Sulu v Malaysia case.
General Editor: Mohan Pillay
Editor: Chan Leng Sun SC
Publishing Editor: Yeo Boon Tat
Assistant Editors: Ramandeep Kaur, Matthew Koh, Janice Lee, Derek Loh, Meera Rajah, Benjamin Tham, Derric Yeoh
Author(s) / Editor(s) / Contributor(s):
Lecture by
Articles by
Book Reviews by
The Asian Business Law Institute has summarised, compared and contrasted the laws of the ten ASEAN member states, Australia, China, India, Japan and South Korea under 13 concise principles. This book is the output of an ambitious project by the Asian Business Law Institute to promote the harmonisation of foreign judgment rules in the region.
Date of Publication: July 2020
Publication Format: PDF only (The PDF will be emailed to your email address registered with SAL separately. There is no download option.)
Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments is published by the Asian Business Law Institute as part of its Asian Principles for the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments project. For the first time, the substantive rules for foreign judgments recognition and enforcement in each of the ten ASEAN member states and their Asia-Pacific free trade partners (Australia, China, India, Japan and South Korea) have been summarised in the English language complete with detailed footnotes.Readers who would like to purchase the e-book can place their orders at https://info.sal.org.sg/insolvency/ or contact Catherine Shen (catherine_shen@abli.asia) for inquires.
Access: PDF will be emailed to your email address registered with SAL separately. There is no download option.
General Editors:
Professor Joel Lee - Faculty Of Law, National University Of Singapore
Professor Lawrence Boo Geok Seng - Professional Arbitrator And Mediator, The Arbitration Chambers
This is the first contract law casebook which compiles extracts from the judgements of the Singapore courts, as well as excerpts from relevant Singapore statutes. It is designed to facilitate the teaching and learning of Singapore contract law by providing the reader with a systematic framework for understanding the core legal principles underpinning the different doctrinal facets of this subject. Every chapter provides an introductory overview of a key topic, including the formation of contracts, the interpretation of contracts and the discharge of contracts, to assist the reader in navigating a curated collection of case extracts from some of the most significant contract law cases that have emerged from the Singapore High Court and the Singapore Court of Appeal. Users of this book are invited to read the selection of materials critically in light of the accompanying commentary provided in each chapter, reflect on the “grey” areas of the law that have attracted controversy and consider the extent to which Singapore contract law is similar to, or different from, the position taken elsewhere.Author(s)/Editor(s)/Contributor(s): Dr Burton Ong and Benjamin Wong
Year of Publication: 2020
Page Extent: 680 pages
Member's Price: $120.00 (before GST)
Associate Student's Price: $96.00 (before GST)
Non-Member's Price: $180.00 (before GST)
OUT OF PRINTThe Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act was enacted in 2005 to improve cash-flow by helping to speed up payment in the building and construction industry. Under the Act, any party who has carried out construction work or supplied related goods or services in the building and construction industry under a contract made in writing will have a statutory right to receive progress payment. Applying to both private and public sector projects, under the Act the right to progress payment is available even where the contract has no provision for progress payment.Author(s)/Editor(s)/Contributor(s): Chow Kok Fong, Christopher Chuah and Mohan Pillay (general editors) OUT OF PRINT