The general principles of the Chinese contract law from the perspective of an (English) Common lawyer

This chapter will contrast the statement of general principles found in Arts.1-7 of the Chinese Contract Law (“CCL”) with the approach to general principles of contract law in the (English) common law. The particular purpose of this paper will be on how these two contract law regimes regard contract...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Twigg-Flesner, Christian
Other Authors: DiMatteo, Larry A., Lei, Chen
Format: Book
Language:unknown
Published: Cambridge University Press 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/94468/
http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/94468/1/WRAP-General-principles-Chinese-contract-law-Twigg-Flesner-2017.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316816912.004
Description
Summary:This chapter will contrast the statement of general principles found in Arts.1-7 of the Chinese Contract Law (“CCL”) with the approach to general principles of contract law in the (English) common law. The particular purpose of this paper will be on how these two contract law regimes regard contractual freedom and the extent to which there are limitations to this. It will begin with a short summary account of the CCL’s general principles. The bulk of this paper will then set out the English common law’s approach to general principles, the notion of “freedom of contract”, and the extent to which restrictions to this notion are imposed by the common law. It must be stressed from the outset that this paper is concerned with English variant of the common law and how this contrasts with the CCL. There are, of course, different versions of the common law, and whilst these have common origins, significant variations have developed over time. Secondly, as will be explained, this paper is only concerned with the common law of contracts, and will not consider the way English law now regulates specific types of contracts, such as consumer contracts.