Law of International Trade
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Average customer review:Product Description
Law of International Trade is now a well-established textbook on this complicated and fast moving area of law. This book offers the reader a comprehensive and solid explanation of law and practice with an analysis of the theoretical and doctrinal issues, thus, making it an ideal textbook for students on both academic and professional courses. It is also an invaluable resource for practitioners and those engaged in international commercial operations, such as shipping, trade finance, cargo insurance, cross border litigation, international sales, etc.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #177931 in Books
- Published on: 2009-04-30
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Robert Duxbury is Principal Lecturer in Law at Nottingham Trent University
Customer Reviews
a fine book for english lawyers
I disagree with the other reviewer - this book does NOT claim to be a study of the CISG. It is a book about English law on private international trade transactions and should thus be judged on that. The CISG does not apply in England. I am afraid the reviewer expects quite unfairly that a book on English law should venture into that which is not English law. I found the book most useful in my English law degree. I like the use of cases and how the explanation is always with reference to actual commercial practice. It's a great book for the LLB or LLM student in England.
Narrowly focussed.
For a book which purports to be on international trade, the focus is incredibly narrow. It should be called "International Trade from a Narrow UK Perspective". Most strikingly, the author dismisses the CISG in a few lines, notwithstanding that the majority of international transactions are now goverened by it. Although the book will no doubt be of use to UK law students studying international trade from a UK point of view, it is of almost no value to anyone else, including students from other common law jurisdictions or, for that matter, to UK students who want a truly international perpective.



