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Complex Commercial Litigation - LAWS4765 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Description Civil litigation is more frequently giving rise to commercial cases that are regarded as large or complex so that they are time-consuming, expensive for parties to run and consume a large amount of judicial resources.
The government, judiciary and legal practitioners are concerned at how to efficiently manage these cases. For example see the comments of the Federal Attorney-General, The Hon Robert McClelland MP, Speech to Australian Financial Review Legal Conference 2008, 17 June 2008, "how best do we grapple with large commercial disputes" and Justice Ronald Sackville's decision in the Seven Network Limited v News Limited [2007] FCA 1062 at [3]: "Mega-litigation is an increasing phenomenon and the courts, if not Parliaments, must devise ways to deal with it more effectively". This course examines what factors cause civil litigation to be complex and what tools are available to manage complex civil litigation, including possible reforms. LLM Specialisation Corporate and Commercial Law;Corporate Commercial and Taxation Law
Recommended Prior Knowledge None
Course Objectives This course aims to:
Main Topics
Assessment Class Participation - General 10%
Class Participation - Discussion of an allocated reading 10% Research Essay Synopsis (1000 words) 10% Research Essay (6000 - 8000 words) 70% Course Texts Prescribed
Recommended
Resources Refer to the course outline which will be provided by the lecturer at the beginning of the relevant semester.
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