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This carefully structured, practice-orientated textbook provides everything the law student needs to know about international commercial litigation. The strong comparative component provides a thought-provoking international perspective, while at the same time allowing readers to gain unique insights into litigation in English courts. Three important themes of the book analyse how the international element may call into question the power of the court to hear the case, whether it should exercise this power, whether foreign law applies, and whether the court should take into account any foreign judgement. Hartley provides the reader with extracts from leading cases and relevant legislation, together with an extensive reference library of further reading for those who wish to explore the topic in more detail, making this a valuable, single-source textbook. The title will benefit from a companion website, setting out all relevant case law developments for the students.
In this first complete account of Hartley's thought, Richard C. Allen explains Hartley's theories of physiology, perception and action, language and cognition, emotional development and transformation, and spiritual transcendence. By drawing a biographical portrait of its subject, the book explores the relationship of mind and body in Hartley's system, and surveys Hartley's influence upon later scientists and social reformers, particularly Joseph Priestley.
Rev. ed. of : The foundations of European Community law / by T.C. Hartley. 6th ed. c2007.
Recoge: 1.Communnity institutions - 2.The community legal system - 3.Community law and the member states - 4.Administrative law.
C. Gasquoine Hartley's 'The Truth about Woman' is a thought-provoking feminist book that delves into the nature and purpose of women, from a biological, historical, and modern perspective. Hartley argues that women hold the biological trump card and emphasizes that equality of opportunity is only a starting point for women's freedom. She draws heavily on the work of Darwin and Havelock Ellis to illustrate how all single-celled organisms are essentially female, and she examines some species where the females are dominant, such as spiders. Hartley's study of history is fascinating as she presents evidence to suggest that women are actually superior to men, with barely a single activity of developing society - farming, business, religion - which was not originally within the female domain.