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El. knyga: Contract Law in Changing Times: Asian Perspectives on Pacta Sunt Servanda

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  • Formatas: 282 pages
  • Serija: Markets and the Law
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Dec-2022
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000821468
  • Formatas: 282 pages
  • Serija: Markets and the Law
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Dec-2022
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000821468

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This collection of essays provides a rich and contemporary discussion of the principle of pacta sunt servanda. This principle, which requires that valid agreements are to be honoured, is a cornerstone of contract law. Focusing on contributions from Asia, this book shows that, despite its natural and universal appeal, the pacta sunt servanda principle is neither absolute nor immutable. Exceptions to the binding force of contract must be available in limited circumstances to avoid hardship and unfairness.

This book offers readers new comparative perspectives on the appropriate balance between contractual certainty and flexibility in an era of social instability. Expert authors, mostly from East and Southeast Asia, explore when their domestic legal systems allow exceptions from the binding force of contracts. Doctrines discussed include impossibility, frustration, change of circumstance, force majeure, illegality as well as rights of withdrawal. Other chapters consider the importance of the pacta principle in international law. The challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic feature strongly in the majority of contributions.
List of Contributors
viii
PART A Pacta sunt servanda in changing times
1(104)
1 Pacta sunt servanda, the common law and Hong Kong
3(17)
Stephen Hall
2 Exceptions to pacta sunt servanda in the Chinese Civil Code
20(18)
Siyi Lin
3 In a bubble by the sea: COVID-19, time and contract law in the Macau S.A.R.
38(18)
Celia F. Matias
Monica Chan
4 Contracts in the time of COVID-19: Common law and statutory solutions in Singapore
56(16)
Wayne Courtney
5 The principle of pacta sunt servanda and its exceptions under Japanese contract law
72(15)
Tomohiro Yoshimasa
6 Change of circumstances in Korean contract law: An exception to pacta sunt servanda
87(18)
Boeun Chang
PART B Pacta sunt servanda in specific contexts
105(86)
7 The property management service contract with Chinese characteristics: An exception to pacta sunt servanda?
107(16)
Jianbolou
Yimeng Ye
8 Pacta sunt servanda in the age of cryptocurrency: The case of China
123(16)
Chao Xi
9 Post-employment non-compete agreements under the Taiwan Labour Standards Act and pacta sunt servanda
139(17)
Yalun Yen
10 Pacta sunt servanda and the consumer's right of withdrawal
156(14)
Geraint Howells
11 Contract enforcement during the Global Financial Crisis: Lessons for the coming tsunami
170(21)
Kingsley Ong
PART C Pacta sunt servanda in international law
191(52)
12 Invoking COVID-19 to suspend or terminate the operation of a treaty
193(17)
Hanh Hong Pham
Huong Thi Thu Phung
13 Treaties and pacta sunt servanda: A shared concept for the PRC?
210(13)
Noble Po-Kan Lo
14 Pacta sunt servanda: Comfort letters in an age of instability and strategic rivalry
223(20)
Joel Slawotsky
PART D Conclusion
243(17)
15 Pacta sunt servanda -- a maxim and its exceptions in comparative perspective
245(15)
Normann Witzleb
Index 260
Normann Witzleb is an associate professor at The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Faculty of Law, where he chairs the Obligations Lab Asia in the Centre for Comparative and Transnational Law. He is also an adjunct associate professor at Monash University Australia, Faculty of Law.

Professor Witzleb has published widely on private law, in particular torts and remedies, as well as on privacy and data protection law.