Civil Procedure Rules at 20
-10%
portes grátis
Civil Procedure Rules at 20
Higgins, Andrew
Oxford University Press
09/2020
352
Dura
Inglês
9780198863182
15 a 20 dias
694
Descrição não disponível.
Part I: Introduction
1: Damien Byrne Hill and Maura McIntosh: The Civil Procedure Rules Twenty Years On: The Practitioners' Perspective
2: Andrew Higgins: Keep Calm and Keep Litigating
Part II: Judicial Presentations
3: Terence Etherton: Rule-Making For a Digital Court Process: The Civil Procedure Rules
4: Peter Coulson: Discovery: To Disclosure and Beyond
5: Ernest Ryder: Transformation from First Principles
6: Nathalie Lieven: Interventions in Judicial Review Proceedings
7: Martin Chamberlain: National Security, Closed Material Procedures, and Fair Trials
8: Rupert Jackson: Civil Justice Reform: Where Next?
9: Kate O'Regan: Reflections from Former Masters of the Rolls on Managing Civil Justice
Part III: Collective Redress
10: Stephen Wisking and Ruth Allen: Taking Stock of the Collective Proceedings Regime in the Competition Appeal Tribunal - A Successful Compromise?
11: Rachael Mulheron: Lord Woolf, Multi-Party Situations, and Limitation Periods
Part IV: Disclosure
12: Charles Hollander: Disclosure: Should We Have Stayed with the RSC?
13: Stuart Sime: Proportionality and Search-based Disclosure
Part V: Judicial Review
14: Maurice Sunkin: The Use of Empirically Based Information when Reforming and Evaluating Judicial Review
15: Joe Tomlinson & Alison Pickup: 1. Reforming Judicial Review Costs Rules in an Age of Austerity
Part VI: Costs and Funding
16: Rabeea Assy: The Overriding Principles of Affordable and Expeditious Adjudication
17: John Sorabji: The Long Struggle for Fixed Cost Reform
Part VII: National Security
18: Hayley J. Hooper: A Core Irreducible Minimum? The Operation of the AF (No. 3) Duty in the Closed Material Procedure
Part VIII: Technology
19: Richard Goodman: Reform of Civil Justice
20: Adrian Zuckerman: Artificial Intelligence in the Administration of Justice
1: Damien Byrne Hill and Maura McIntosh: The Civil Procedure Rules Twenty Years On: The Practitioners' Perspective
2: Andrew Higgins: Keep Calm and Keep Litigating
Part II: Judicial Presentations
3: Terence Etherton: Rule-Making For a Digital Court Process: The Civil Procedure Rules
4: Peter Coulson: Discovery: To Disclosure and Beyond
5: Ernest Ryder: Transformation from First Principles
6: Nathalie Lieven: Interventions in Judicial Review Proceedings
7: Martin Chamberlain: National Security, Closed Material Procedures, and Fair Trials
8: Rupert Jackson: Civil Justice Reform: Where Next?
9: Kate O'Regan: Reflections from Former Masters of the Rolls on Managing Civil Justice
Part III: Collective Redress
10: Stephen Wisking and Ruth Allen: Taking Stock of the Collective Proceedings Regime in the Competition Appeal Tribunal - A Successful Compromise?
11: Rachael Mulheron: Lord Woolf, Multi-Party Situations, and Limitation Periods
Part IV: Disclosure
12: Charles Hollander: Disclosure: Should We Have Stayed with the RSC?
13: Stuart Sime: Proportionality and Search-based Disclosure
Part V: Judicial Review
14: Maurice Sunkin: The Use of Empirically Based Information when Reforming and Evaluating Judicial Review
15: Joe Tomlinson & Alison Pickup: 1. Reforming Judicial Review Costs Rules in an Age of Austerity
Part VI: Costs and Funding
16: Rabeea Assy: The Overriding Principles of Affordable and Expeditious Adjudication
17: John Sorabji: The Long Struggle for Fixed Cost Reform
Part VII: National Security
18: Hayley J. Hooper: A Core Irreducible Minimum? The Operation of the AF (No. 3) Duty in the Closed Material Procedure
Part VIII: Technology
19: Richard Goodman: Reform of Civil Justice
20: Adrian Zuckerman: Artificial Intelligence in the Administration of Justice
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Part I: Introduction
1: Damien Byrne Hill and Maura McIntosh: The Civil Procedure Rules Twenty Years On: The Practitioners' Perspective
2: Andrew Higgins: Keep Calm and Keep Litigating
Part II: Judicial Presentations
3: Terence Etherton: Rule-Making For a Digital Court Process: The Civil Procedure Rules
4: Peter Coulson: Discovery: To Disclosure and Beyond
5: Ernest Ryder: Transformation from First Principles
6: Nathalie Lieven: Interventions in Judicial Review Proceedings
7: Martin Chamberlain: National Security, Closed Material Procedures, and Fair Trials
8: Rupert Jackson: Civil Justice Reform: Where Next?
9: Kate O'Regan: Reflections from Former Masters of the Rolls on Managing Civil Justice
Part III: Collective Redress
10: Stephen Wisking and Ruth Allen: Taking Stock of the Collective Proceedings Regime in the Competition Appeal Tribunal - A Successful Compromise?
11: Rachael Mulheron: Lord Woolf, Multi-Party Situations, and Limitation Periods
Part IV: Disclosure
12: Charles Hollander: Disclosure: Should We Have Stayed with the RSC?
13: Stuart Sime: Proportionality and Search-based Disclosure
Part V: Judicial Review
14: Maurice Sunkin: The Use of Empirically Based Information when Reforming and Evaluating Judicial Review
15: Joe Tomlinson & Alison Pickup: 1. Reforming Judicial Review Costs Rules in an Age of Austerity
Part VI: Costs and Funding
16: Rabeea Assy: The Overriding Principles of Affordable and Expeditious Adjudication
17: John Sorabji: The Long Struggle for Fixed Cost Reform
Part VII: National Security
18: Hayley J. Hooper: A Core Irreducible Minimum? The Operation of the AF (No. 3) Duty in the Closed Material Procedure
Part VIII: Technology
19: Richard Goodman: Reform of Civil Justice
20: Adrian Zuckerman: Artificial Intelligence in the Administration of Justice
1: Damien Byrne Hill and Maura McIntosh: The Civil Procedure Rules Twenty Years On: The Practitioners' Perspective
2: Andrew Higgins: Keep Calm and Keep Litigating
Part II: Judicial Presentations
3: Terence Etherton: Rule-Making For a Digital Court Process: The Civil Procedure Rules
4: Peter Coulson: Discovery: To Disclosure and Beyond
5: Ernest Ryder: Transformation from First Principles
6: Nathalie Lieven: Interventions in Judicial Review Proceedings
7: Martin Chamberlain: National Security, Closed Material Procedures, and Fair Trials
8: Rupert Jackson: Civil Justice Reform: Where Next?
9: Kate O'Regan: Reflections from Former Masters of the Rolls on Managing Civil Justice
Part III: Collective Redress
10: Stephen Wisking and Ruth Allen: Taking Stock of the Collective Proceedings Regime in the Competition Appeal Tribunal - A Successful Compromise?
11: Rachael Mulheron: Lord Woolf, Multi-Party Situations, and Limitation Periods
Part IV: Disclosure
12: Charles Hollander: Disclosure: Should We Have Stayed with the RSC?
13: Stuart Sime: Proportionality and Search-based Disclosure
Part V: Judicial Review
14: Maurice Sunkin: The Use of Empirically Based Information when Reforming and Evaluating Judicial Review
15: Joe Tomlinson & Alison Pickup: 1. Reforming Judicial Review Costs Rules in an Age of Austerity
Part VI: Costs and Funding
16: Rabeea Assy: The Overriding Principles of Affordable and Expeditious Adjudication
17: John Sorabji: The Long Struggle for Fixed Cost Reform
Part VII: National Security
18: Hayley J. Hooper: A Core Irreducible Minimum? The Operation of the AF (No. 3) Duty in the Closed Material Procedure
Part VIII: Technology
19: Richard Goodman: Reform of Civil Justice
20: Adrian Zuckerman: Artificial Intelligence in the Administration of Justice
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.