International Negotiable Instruments

International Negotiable Instruments
Author: BENJAMIN. PEARI GEVA (SAGI.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2020-11-19
Genre:
ISBN: 9780198828686

This book provides a comprehensive and thorough analysis of the legal framework for the treatment of international negotiable instruments. It considers the approach within and across major legal systems and pinpoints the key distinctions for the application of choice of law rules.

International Payment

International Payment
Author: United Nations Commission on International Trade Law. Working Group on International Negotiable Instruments
Publisher:
Total Pages: 38
Release: 1977
Genre: Bills of exchange
ISBN:

Research Handbook on International Commercial Contracts

Research Handbook on International Commercial Contracts
Author: Andrew Hutchison
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
Total Pages: 368
Release: 2020-12-25
Genre: Law
ISBN: 178897106X

This comprehensive Research Handbook examines the continuum between private ordering and state regulation in the lex mercatoria, highlighting constancy and change in this dynamic and evolving system in order to offer an in-depth discussion of international commercial contract law. International scholars from a range of jurisdictions and legal cultures across Africa, North America and Europe, dissect a plethora of contract types, including sale, insurance, shipping, credit, negotiable instruments and agency against the backdrop of key legal regimes commonly chosen in international agreements.

International Payments

International Payments
Author: United Nations Commission on International Trade Law
Publisher:
Total Pages: 172
Release: 1972
Genre: Bills of exchange (International law)
ISBN:

The End of Negotiable Instruments

The End of Negotiable Instruments
Author: James Steven Rogers
Publisher:
Total Pages: 274
Release: 2012-01-12
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0199856222

In The End of Negotiable Instruments: Bringing Payments Systems Law Out of the Past, author James Rogers challenges the basic assumptions of the law of checks and notes and its history, and provides a well-reasoned account of how the law could be changed to better suit the evolution of new payment technologies. The modern American law of payment systems is in disarray. Efforts to create a unified body of law for payment systems have so far been unsuccessful. Part of the reason for that failure is the assumption that the existing law works well for the traditional paper-based check system, and that problems have been created only by the evolution of new technologies. The End of Negotiable Instruments argues that this assumption is unfounded. The basic law of checks is itself anachronistic. There are no other books that undertake a similar analysis—there are legal treatises on the law of checks and notes, but all of them take for granted the basic assumptions challenged in this book. Several articles were published in the late twentieth century concerning the dispute over the application of certain doctrines of traditional negotiable instruments law to modern consumer finance transactions, but none of this literature went on to consider the broader question of whether there is anything worthwhile left in negotiable instruments law.