Remedies in Australian Private Law presents a detailed and scholarly map of remedies under Australian private law. Clearly structured and accessibly written, the text takes a black-letter law approach to remedies in common law, equity and statute, and develops a framework for understanding the principles of private law remedies and their practical application. The third edition has been updated to include recent cases in remedial law, offering students clear links between principles and practice, and provides more in-depth coverage of compensation under the Australian Consumer Law. Reasonable fee awards and disgorgement and accounts of profit are now addressed in separate chapters to reflect recent changes in international case law. Written by an expert author team, Remedies in Australian Private Law enables students and practitioners to develop a coherent understanding of remedial law and to analyse legal problems and identify appropriate remedial solutions.
By:
Katy Barnett (University of Melbourne), Sirko Harder (University of Sussex) Imprint: Cambridge University Press Country of Publication: United Kingdom Edition: 3rd Revised edition Dimensions:
Height: 244mm,
Width: 170mm,
Spine: 36mm
Weight: 1.200kg ISBN:9781009390194 ISBN 10: 1009390198 Pages: 708 Publication Date:12 November 2024 Audience:
General/trade
,
ELT Advanced
Format:Paperback Publisher's Status: Active
1. Introduction; Part I. General Principles of Compensation: 2. Assessment of compensation; 3. Attribution of responsibility; 4. Multiple Wrongdoers; Part II. Compensation in Specific Contexts: 5. Compensation for breach of contract; 6. Compensation in tort; 7. Compensation for personal injury and death; 8. Compensation under the Australian Consumer Law; 9. Equitable compensation for equitable wrongs; Part III. Remedies Compelling Performance and Related Remedies: 10. Specific performance; 11. Injunctions; 12. Equitable damages' or Lord Cairns' Act damages; Part IV. Remedies as Vindication: 13. Reasonable fee awards; 14. Self-help remedies; 15. Exemplary damages and aggravated damages; 16. Apologies and declaratory relief; Part V. Account of Profits and other Gain-based Reliefs for Wrongs: 17. Accounts of profit and disgorgement; Part VI. Restitution and Giving Back: 18. Personal remedies for unjust enrichment; 19. Recission; Part VII. Proprietary Remedies: 20. Proprietary remedies; Part VIII. Enforcement of Remedies: 21. Enforcement of remedies.
Katy Barnett is Professor in the Melbourne Law School at the University of Melbourne. Sirko Harder is Reader in the Sussex Law School at the University of Sussex.