1. What is contract for? And what is contract law for? 2. The historical context of contract 3. Classical and neo-classical contract 4. The ideological context of contract 5. The relational context of contract 6. The economic context of contract law: Part I 7. The economic context of contract law: Part 2 8. Contract and Globalization
Richard Austen-Baker is Senior Lecturer in Law at Lancaster University Law School where he has taught since 2004. He has been teaching contracts and commercial law to undergraduates every year since 1999.
Qi Zhou is Associate Professor for Law at the University of Leeds Law School, having joined in June 2013. Prior to this, he was a Lecturer in Law at the University of Sheffield.
"Its chapters set out in a coherent sequence most of the principal
lines of theoretical inquiry to which the study of the law of
contract should give rise … there really is nothing for students
like these chapters in UK literature … I myself have tried to
utilise the theoretical insights Dr Austen-Baker and Dr Zhou
describe in this book in my own work on contract. I am very happy
to see this effort continue in the hands of two members of a
subsequent generation of contract scholars who have so ably taken
on what, in the end, is the most important task …of making those
insights of interest to students. I believe Dr Austen-Baker and Dr
Zhou have accomplished this task, and have done doing so while
conveying the intellectual quality of those insights."
—David Campbell, Lancaster University Law School
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