Formation and Third Party Beneficiaries
Mindy Chen-Wishart, Alexander Loke, and Stefan Vogenauer
Abstract
Studies in the Contract Laws of Asia provides an authoritative account of the contract law regimes of selected Asian jurisdictions, including the major centres of commerce where limited critical commentaries have been published in the English language. Each volume in the series aims to offer an insider’s perspective into specific areas of contract law—remedies, formation, parties, contents, vitiating factors, change of circumstances, illegality, and public policy—and explores how these diverse jurisdictions address common problems encountered in contractual disputes. A concluding chapter draws ... More
Studies in the Contract Laws of Asia provides an authoritative account of the contract law regimes of selected Asian jurisdictions, including the major centres of commerce where limited critical commentaries have been published in the English language. Each volume in the series aims to offer an insider’s perspective into specific areas of contract law—remedies, formation, parties, contents, vitiating factors, change of circumstances, illegality, and public policy—and explores how these diverse jurisdictions address common problems encountered in contractual disputes. A concluding chapter draws out the convergences and divergences, and other themes. All the Asian jurisdictions examined have inherited or adopted the common law or civil law models of European legal systems. Scholars of legal transplant will find a mine of information on how received law has developed after the initial adaptation and transplant process, including the influences affecting and mechanisms of these developments. The many points of convergence and divergence (in both form and in substance) emerge. These provide good starting points for regional harmonization projects. Volume II of this series deals with contract formation and contracts for the benefit of third parties in the laws of China, India, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Myanmar, and Indonesia. Typically, each jurisdiction is covered in two chapters; the first deals with contract formation, while the second deals with contracts for the benefit of third parties.
Keywords:
contract formation,
third party rights,
contract law,
comparative contract law,
Asian law
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2018 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780198808114 |
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: February 2018 |
DOI:10.1093/oso/9780198808114.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Mindy Chen-Wishart, editor
Professor in the Law of Contract, Oxford University; Professor, National University of Singapore
Alexander Loke, editor
Professor, School of Law, City University of Hong Kong
Stefan Vogenauer, editor
Director, Max Planck Institute for European Legal History in Frankfurt
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