Readership: Judges, legal practitioners, academics, post-graduate students, first degree law students.
T M Yeo, Associate Professor in the Faculty of Law, National University of Singapore
"...he has produced a thorough and insightful overview of a topic that few have taken on before...Yeo proceeds to show how the traditional choice of law rules and approaches will apply. It is in this part of the book that the author's skills and knowledge as a conflicts lawyer become apparent...The increasing practical importance of the book's subject matter means that it should be of great interest not only to the academic but also to the practitioner...It is a very interesting book to read cover to cover: the analysis is clear and the use of diagrams helpful...as a largely theoretical analysis it is an excellent book on a topic that few have attempted to fathom." - Louise Merrett, The Cambridge Law Journal
Introduction 1: Relevance of Choice of Law Analysis for Equitable Doctrines 2: Relationship between Equitable Doctrines and Choice of Law 3: Characterization 4: Substance and Procedure 5: Property and Obligation 6: Property 7: Contracts and Agreements 8: Torts and Wrongs 9: Restitution and Unjust Enrichment 10: Conclusion: Equity in Domestic Law and Choice of Law