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Comprehensive Commercial Law: 2026 Statutory Supplement

Authors
  • Pamela Foohey
  • Robert M. Lawless
  • Angela Littwin
Series / Supplements
Description

Comprehensive Commercial Law 2026 Statutory Supplement is an essential reference resource for professors and students of commercial law. The 2026 edition is fully updated as of April 1, 2026 and includes the entire Uniform Commercial Code (excluding Article 6) and the federal Bankruptcy Code, as well as a selection of other sources most commonly used in commercial law courses, such as federal statutes and regulations, uniform state laws, and Restatement provisions. Notable content includes the Truth in Lending Act, Electronic Funds Transfer Act, Federal Tax Lien Act, Uniform Electronic Transactions Act, Uniform Voidable Transactions Act, Uniform Motor Vehicle Certificate of Title and Anti-Theft Act, and excerpts from the CISG and from the ICC’s uniform rules for letters of credit. 

New to the 2026 Edition:

• New team of Pamela Foohey, Robert M. Lawless, and Angela Littwin updating this supplement, which formerly was curated by Ronald J. Mann, Elizabeth Warren, and Jay Lawrence Westbrook.

• Updates to the entirety of the UCC with the most recent revisions compiled by the Permanent Editorial Board for the Uniform Commercial Code.

• Streamlining of materials to reduce bulk. 

Professors and students will benefit from:

• Careful curation of necessary statutory provisions to cover a variety of commercial law courses, including sales, payment systems, secured transactions, and bankruptcy, allowing students to use this supplement for more than one course.

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About the authors
Pamela Foohey

Pamela Foohey is the Allen Post Professor of Law at the University of Georgia School of Law. Specializing in bankruptcy, commercial law, consumer finance and business law, Foohey’s scholarship primarily involves empirical studies of bankruptcy and related parts of the legal system, combining quantitative and qualitative interview-based research. She presently serves as a co-investigator on the Consumer Bankruptcy Law Project, a long-term research project studying persons who file bankruptcy. Data from this research project serve as the basis of her in-progress co-authored book Debt’s Grip: Risk and Consumer Bankruptcy, forthcoming with the University of California Press. Her work in business bankruptcy focuses on nonprofit entities, with a particular emphasis on how religious organizations use bankruptcy. Data from this project are included in her other in-progress book Forgive Us Our Debts: How Black Churches Use Bankruptcy to Survive, forthcoming with the University of Chicago Press.

She is a co-author for Secured Transactions: A Systems Approach, a leading textbook on the topic, and for Commercial Transactions: A Systems Approach. Her recent scholarship includes the article “Silencing Litigation Through Bankruptcy” in the Virginia Law Review. Other leading journals publishing her work include the Southern California Law Review, the Boston College Law Review, the Notre Dame Law Review and Law & Contemporary Problems, among others.

Foohey has assisted members of Congress and federal and state agencies in the areas of bankruptcy and consumer credit. She has also provided expert media commentary for high profile publications such as The New York Times, Financial Times and The Washington Post, in addition to Bloomberg and National Public Radio.

Robert M. Lawless
University of Illinois College of Law

Professor Robert Lawless specializes in bankruptcy, consumer credit, and business law. He is intensely interested in empirical legal studies and interdisciplinary work. In addition to a course in empirical methods, he teaches in the areas of bankruptcy and commercial law.

Professor Lawless is one of seven regular contributors to the blog Credit Slips, a discussion on credit and bankruptcy. He also is a member of the Consumer Bankruptcy Project, a long-term empirical project studying persons who file bankruptcy. The latest report from the Consumer Bankruptcy Project received the 2009 Editors' Prize from the American Bankruptcy Law Journal.

Professor Lawless has testified before Congress, and his work has been featured in media outlets such as CNN, CNBC, the New York Times, USA Today, the National Law Journal, the L.A. Times, the Financial Times, and Money magazine.

Product Information
Publication date
2026-07-22
Copyright Year
2026
Pages
1344
Print
9798899639876
eBook
9798899639883
Subject
Commercial Law
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