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(LAW)
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Leader:
Offered:
Clayton Second semester 2006 (Day)
Synopsis: Contract law addresses the broad concepts, principles and rules used to determine the content of binding promises and as appropriate, defeasibility or enforcement in a market economy. The unit is taught paying due attention to critiques of contract law as well as the policy factors influencing various forms of contracting. A practical skills and ethics research component is also provided.
Objectives: At the conclusion of the unit, students should have achieved the following learning outcomes: (1) a coherent, critical and policy-aware understanding of the principles and rules of the law of contract; (2) a well developed ability to extract and evaluate principles and rules from primary and secondary law sources (cases, statutes, textbooks, articles and other writings about contract law); (3) a well developed ability to use these principles and rules to solve selected problems in examinations and other settings; (4) a well developed understanding of the dynamic nature of the law of contract; (5) a reasonable level of understanding of trajectories for further evolution of contract law's principles and rules.
Assessment: Tutorial Preparation and Participation: 10%; Examination (3 hours writing time plus 30 minutes reading and noting time): 90%
Contact Hours: Three hours of lectures per week and one hour tutorial per fortnight
Prerequisites: LAW2101
Corequisites: LAW1100 or LAW1101 and LAW1102
Prohibitions: LAW2100