Comparative Commercial Contracts: Law, Culture and Economic Development
Author:
Kozolchyk, Boris
Edition:
3rd
Copyright Date:
2025
- Publication Date: April 21st, 2025
- ISBN: 9798892097307
- Subject: Comparative Law
- Series: Hornbooks
- Type: Hornbook Treatises
- Description: This work offers a contextual comparative analysis of commercial contracts from their origin until the present time. It studies their positive and living law in countries and regions representative of major legal systems and business cultures: Classical Rome, Medieval Europe and the Middle East, Codification Europe (especially France and Germany), Post-Colonial Latin America, the Soviet Union, the Peoples’ Republic of China, England (eighteenth and nineteenth centuries), and Post-Colonial United States. It identifies contractual concepts, principles, rules, doctrines, methods of reasoning and commercial practices that have contributed most to mankind’s economic development. It explains how certain selfish and altruistic components of standard and fiduciary commercial and financial practices combine to cause the necessary trust and cooperation that makes possible both economic growth and legal institutional longevity. The 3rd Edition additionally shows how standard and fiduciary commercial and banking good faith practices contribute to economic development alongside the “logic of the reasonable,” an analytical tool traditionally used by common law, particularly in the United States. This rubric has become an integral part of the “positive” and customary laws and practices of developed and developing nations, as evidenced by the UNIDROIT Principles on the Law of Contract.