
Contract and the Australian Consumer Law, 2nd Edition
$70.75
- Paperback
192 pages
- Release Date
13 March 2019
Summary
Contract and the Australian Consumer Law: A Practitioner’s Guide
Contract and the Australian Consumer Law analyses the way the Australian Consumer Law has modified contract law. In particular, provisions in the Australian Consumer Law in relation to consumer guarantees for goods and services, unfair contract terms, misleading or deceptive conduct and unconscionable conduct are considered and analysed. The book discusses recent cases on these topics and extracts guiding prin…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781760022013 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1760022012 |
| Author: | Laina Chan, John Carter |
| Publisher: | Federation Press |
| Imprint: | Federation Press |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 192 |
| Edition: | 2nd |
| Release Date: | 13 March 2019 |
| Weight: | 240g |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
It is suggested on the back cover of Contract and the Australian Consumer Law that it is intended to be read from cover to cover … I did just that. It is a refreshing read by Emeritus Professor John Carter and Laina Chan about a very dull topic. The Australian Consumer Law reads as though it had been written by some demonic anarchist dreamt up by Evelyn Waugh. It is very long, and full of words that do not bear their ordinary meaning. Statutory liabilities are referred to as “guarantees” although they are nothing of the sort. “Consumers” include companies which are not consumers. A contract with a “consumer” is not necessarily a “consumer contract”. Things are defined as “warranties” when they are not even contractual terms, let alone warranties. Quite how the authors of this book managed to maintain their sanity whilst surveying this awful scene is a mystery. But we should be grateful to them. Their gentle mockery of the legislation turns out to be rather helpful in getting to grips with it. At 162 pages, it is a short book, and all the more useful for that. Thoroughly recommended. - Blog by Robert Fenwick Elliott, Construction Law Barrister; International Member of Keating Chambers
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