New Zealand Law Review

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2004 PART II

2004 PART II





 

The Boundaries of Fiduciary Accountability

Robert Flannigan

 

 

A conceptual fog has descended on the fiduciary jurisprudence of the Commonwealth. Judges and commentators in Canada, Australia, and England have misunderstood or misdescribed the conventional boundaries. The confusion impairs the principled assignment of fiduciary responsibility. The solution is to refocus fiduciary analysis on its rightful singular concern with opportunism in limited access arrangements.

The Constitutional Future of New Zealand

BV Harris
The future design of the New Zealand constitution is a topic of considerable current public interest. This article attempts to explore compendiously that possible future. After relating the structure and functioning of the current system of government, the article: suggests processes for accomplishing any needed constitutional reform; isolates forces for constitutional evolution; advances options for change; and tenders a possible order for development.

Putting the Case Against the Duty to Put the Case

Richard Mahoney
[No Abstract]
Reviews

Civil Procedure: John Turner
Commercial Law: Duncan Webb
Health Care Law: Part 2: Legislative Developments: Joanna Manning
Public International Law: Treasa Dunworth






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