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Selections from the Restatement (Second) Contracts and Uniform Commercial Code for First-Year Contracts 2024 Supplement

Authors
  • Tracey E. George
  • Russell Korobkin
Series / Supplements
Teaching Materials
NO
Description
Table of contents

With this purchase, you will receive access to the Connected eBook on Casebook Connect, including lifetime access to the online ebook with highlight, annotation, and search capabilities. Access also includes an outline tool and other helpful resources. Connected eBooks provide what you need most to be successful in your law school classes.

An invaluable supplement to any contracts law casebook (including the authors’ own K: A Common Law Approach to Contracts), this concise statutory supplement provides the materials necessary to keep your first-year contracts course completely up-to-date. Inside you will find the materials necessary to learn how to use the most important sources of law (other than the judicial opinions which fill your casebook): the Restatement (Second) of Contracts and the principal commercial statute—the Uniform Commercial Code—as part of the foundation course in contracts.

The authors’ careful selection of sections and the judicious inclusion of comments and illustrations from the Restatement (Second) and the Uniform Commercial Code ensures students have access to resources which add helpful depth to the “black letter law” and avoids overwhelming students with dense and unnecessary detail. This statutory supplement aids students in the task of learning the essentials of contract law.

Highlights of the 2024 Edition:

  • Includes Article 1 and 2 sections as amended by the American Law Institute and the Uniform Law Commission in 2022 to respond to emerging technologies, including artificial intelligence, blockchain, and digital currencies.
  • Provides an update on state legislative actions in response to the amendments.
  • Article 1 includes an updated preface detailing the revision process and key changes to the UCC.
  • Article 1 was substantially revised to change fundamental concepts that are present throughout the code (§1-201. “Definitions”). The supplement includes those revisions that are most relevant to first-year contracts: “conspicuous” (10) is condensed, “electronic” (16A) is added, “money” (24) is clarified, and send (26) and sign (37) are updated.
  • Article 2’s scope provision (§2-102) expressly adopts the “predominant factor” test of “mixed” or “hybrid” transactions that involve both goods and services (§2-106(5)).
  • Numerous sections (§2-201, §2-202, §2-203, §2-205, and §2-209) are modernized by to account for electronic signatures and digital documents.
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About the authors
Tracey E. George
Vanderbilt

Tracey George is the vice provost for faculty affairs, the Charles B. Cox III and Lucy D. Cox Family Chair in Law and Liberty, and a professor of political science at Vanderbilt University. George teaches Contracts, Evidence, and The Life of the Law: An Introduction to the Study of Law in the law school, where she has earned the Hall-Hartman Teaching Prize eight times. In her scholarship, George brings a social science perspective to a range of topics, including judges and courts, judicial selection and elections, legal education and the legal profession, and contract law and theory. She has published numerous studies in which she examines how institutional design influences actions and outcomes in state and federal judicial systems. She is also a recognized expert on the study of legal education.

George received a J.D. from Stanford Law School and an M.A. in political science from Washington University. She was a tenured professor at the University of Missouri-Columbia and Northwestern University before joining Vanderbilt in 2004.

Russell Korobkin
Richard C. Maxwell Professor of Law
University of California, Los Angeles

Russell Korobkin is the Richard C. Maxwell Distinguished Professor of Law at the UCLA School of Law, where he also served as the Vice Dean for Academic and Institutional Affairs from 2015-19. He is the author of two textbooks, K: A Common Law Approach to Contracts (Aspen Publishing, 2d. ed., 2017) (with Tracey George) and Negotiation Theory and Strategy (Aspen Publishing, 3d ed., 2014), one university press book, Stem Cell Century: Law and Policy for a Breakthrough Technology (Yale, 2007), and more than 50 law journal articles on the subjects of contracts, law and economics, negotiation, and health care law. A former San Francisco management consultant and Washington D.C. lawyer, Professor Korobkin earned his undergraduate and law degrees from Stanford University. In addition to UCLA, he has taught full time at the University of Illinois, University of Texas, and Harvard University Law Schools and has taught intensive “short courses” at law and business schools on four continents.

Product Information
Publication date
2024-07-12
Copyright Year
2024
Pages
236
Connected eBook (Digital Only)
9798892077583
Subject
Contract Law
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