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Landlord and tenant law past, present and future

By: Contributor(s): Language: English Publication details: Oxford Hart 2006Description: xliii, 281p. 24cmISBN:
  • 1841135933
  • 9781841135939
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • 346.410434 $2 18
Partial contents:
Landlord and tenant law: mapping the rest past -- Street v Mountford revisited -- Judicial directions in landlord and tenant law: different policies for different sectors -- Commercial leases past and present: the contribution of the Law Commission -- Commercial leases: future directions -- Agricultural tenancies: past and present -- Agricultural tenancies: future directions -- Long residential leases: past and present -- Housing law: past and present -- Housing law: the future -- Recent developments in Australian residential tenancies laws -- Impoverished tenants in 20th Century America
Summary: Discusses patterns of landlord and tenant laws within the different property sectors, legislative, judicial and policy developments in property law, and the role market forces have played and are expected to continue to play in shaping the law.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book London Books 346.410434 BRI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 30073691

Landlord and tenant law: mapping the rest past -- Street v Mountford revisited -- Judicial directions in landlord and tenant law: different policies for different sectors -- Commercial leases past and present: the contribution of the Law Commission -- Commercial leases: future directions -- Agricultural tenancies: past and present -- Agricultural tenancies: future directions -- Long residential leases: past and present -- Housing law: past and present -- Housing law: the future -- Recent developments in Australian residential tenancies laws -- Impoverished tenants in 20th Century America

Discusses patterns of landlord and tenant laws within the different property sectors, legislative, judicial and policy developments in property law, and the role market forces have played and are expected to continue to play in shaping the law.