Her Honour, in adopting the modern
English law approach, found that a court's unlimited in personam jurisdiction over a defendant justifying the issuance of a worldwide Mareva injunction did not depend on whether a defendant had assets in the jurisdiction at all.
Not exact matches
The introduction of
English Votes for
English Laws (EVEL) conforms to this
approach, as does the current government's programme of devolution within England.
The Conservative
approach to
English votes for
English laws (Evel) isn't about finding the answer to a difficult question any more.
In essence, the Conservative
approach to
English devolution focuses on three themes: a better and more balanced economy; bespoke Growth Deals and decentralisation of powers to (large) cities which choose to have elected mayor; and
English Votes for
English Laws (EVEL).
The Lib Dems agree with the Tories on the need to devolve income tax - setting powers to Holyrood but they take a different
approach on
English laws.
The Supreme Court however left considerable discretion to judges deciding future cases, rather than setting out a detailed breakdown of how awards should be assessed - arguably, a very
English (rather than Scots)
law approach?
Several
law schools have experimented with introducing foreign and international issues into basic LRW instruction.68 Some have responded to these arguments by creating either upper - class elective seminars with a global LRW focus, 69 or by creating a specialized foreign / international section of the basic LRW course.70 Typically, this has been accomplished in a largely ad hoc fashion through the creative efforts of individual instructors, who sometimes offer a special «international» section of the basic LRW course.71 Additionally, LRW professors whose primary responsibility is to educate foreign students have naturally gravitated toward incorporating global dimensions in their problems and assignments.72 Faculty specializing in teaching legal
English have observed that
English is increasingly the language of choice for transnational negotiations and legal instruments, even in circumstances where the underlying transactions do not involve Anglo - American
law.73 Consequently, they also emphasize a transnational
approach that responds to the needs of their students.
My
approach was to construct an occasion for a limited foray into the
law of a sister common -
law jurisdiction that conducts business in
English and shares substantial jurisprudential common ground with the United States.
[121] This also now appears to be the
approach under
English law.
For traditionalists, it seems to follow that the preferred
approach would be the
English approach; to allow new entrants in areas not currently well served and not to seek to have the
law societies regulate them.
Therefore, security packages typically require a more non-standard
approach, as securities which under
English law may require only one document, require a large set of documents under Polish
law.
We bring a commercial
approach to
English law, domestically and internationally.
This introduced corporate liability for failure to prevent bribery by an «associated person» and marked a novel
approach under
English law to the problem of bribery and corruption on behalf of corporates.
In this issue: The
English Courts»
approach to ordering disclosure from French companies; Enforcement of commercial pledges under UAE
law; News
Outside of Canadian literature, John Eaton has recently published Finding
English Law: Key Titles for Non-UK Lawyers and Researchers, (London: Wildy, Simmonds & Hill Publishing, 2011), which like his Canadian book takes a granular
approach listing 97 topics.
The case of Obrascon serves as an indicator as to how the
English Courts will
approach the interpretation of FIDIC standard terms, but may also provide insight into how arbitrators with a common
law background may
approach these issues.
Overall, however, the body of
English Law and the
approach of London's commercial courts should continue to ensure London remains an attractive jurisdiction to operate in.
Adhering to the orthodox common
law view of a strict publication rule, the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal parted with the
English approach in Fevaworks.
In examining the legal reasoning behind the Hong Kong case of Yeung v Google and German case of RS v Google, and comparing the two, this chapter argues that the orthodox
approach to fixing responsibility for defamation, based either on the established
English common
law notion of publisher or innocent disseminator or the existing categories of passive host, conduit and caching in the relevant European Union Directive, is far from adequate to address the challenges brought about by search engines and their Autocomplete function.