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Contracts: Law in Action: Volume I: The Introductory Course (2010)

Author Stewart Macaulay, Jean Braucher, John A. Kidwell, William Whitford
Publisher LexisNexis
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Book Details
PublisherLexisNexis
ISBN / ASIN142248176X
ISBN-139781422481769
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,156,103
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

This revision continues to take the "Law in Action" part of the title seriously. It puts contracts problems in context and focus on contracts problems that students will face when they become lawyers. This allows professors to teach a course both more theoretical and more practical at the same time.

American contract law is messy and often contradictory. Even when the rules stay more or less the same, their application varies from court to court over time. The book helps students see the hard choices lurking behind what seem to be the simple rules of contract law and prepares them to hit the ground running when they begin practice.

While much material remains unchanged, the major updates are on interesting and important matters such as:

   unconscionability
   form contracts printed in fine print or hidden in other ways (particularly in the area of computer programs)
   the growing uses of arbitration to repeal the reform statutes of earlier decades

In addition, based on the recognition that most law students are in their 20s, explanations have been added about such "commonplace things" as the Vietnam conflict, OPEC, and the consumer movement and other manifestations of Pre-Reagan politics, as well as what were ice houses, dial telephones, and typewriters.