


Book & eBook
Author(s) :
Publication Date:2016-03-01
Quantity
SGD 976.27
ISBN:
2516000000000
jurisdiction:
Singapore
Law Relating to Specific Contracts in Singapore, 2nd Edition is an authoritative reference that covers contractual issues in most common commercial situations that practitioners are likely to encounter in their practice in Singapore.
Its breadth of coverage, scope and detail make it an indispensable treatise on the application of the law of contract in commercial transactions. This new edition includes copious citation of Singapore and foreign case authorities and a careful review of new statutory provisions. This comprehensive reference will continue to be the practitioner's choice for authority and clarity of discussion.
KEY FEATURES:
The use of Dispute Boards (DBs) in construction and infrastructure projects has grown dramatically in recent decades, with adoption accelerating most sharply in mega-projects where the financial and scheduling stakes are highest. This book is an indispensable guide for practitioners, project owners, contractors and advisers who are increasingly encountering Dispute Board provisions in major project contracts across the region.
This work is believed to be the first comprehensive treatment of Dispute Boards written specifically from an Asian perspective. It examines not only the internationally recognised ICC Dispute Board Rules and the FIDIC suite of contracts (including FIDIC 2017) but also the Singapore-specific regimes that are increasingly prominent in public and private sector procurement: the Singapore Infrastructure Dispute-Management Protocol (SIDP) and the Public Sector Standard Conditions of Contract (PSSCOC). These Singapore instruments are now being utilised on some of the largest infrastructure contracts in the region, including contracts valued in excess of SGD 3 billion. The book contains examples and forms that offer practitioners a point of entry into this growing area of dispute resolution.
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Authors:
Chow Kok Fong is a Fellow of the International Academy of Construction Lawyers and a Chartered Arbitrator. He has been described as the “doyen of Singapore construction law” by the Chief Justice of Singapore and as “a distinguished legal expert” by the Chief Justice of Malaysia, in the Forewords to the sixth edition of his landmark work Law and Practice of Construction Contracts (Sweet & Maxwell, 2025). He receives Dispute Board appointments on projects across Asia, including a recent appointment for a contract valued at SGD 3.8 billion.
Tan Liam Beng is a Chartered Arbitrator and Advocate and Solicitor with engineering and legal qualifications, whose 30 years of construction dispute practice spans arbitrations across Singapore, India, Taiwan, Vietnam, Indonesia and Malaysia.
Price:
SGD 299.00
Commercial Injunctions in Singapore is the definitive guide for practitioners, in-house counsel, and academics navigating one of the fastest-developing areas of modern litigation.
This book delivers a comprehensive and practical account of the principles governing the grant, scope, and defence of a wide range of commercial injunctions. This is achieved by drawing on the majority of reported Singapore Supreme Court decisions, including:
Blending rigorous legal analysis with insights from real-world litigation experience, the authors unpack procedural nuances unique to Singapore while offering strategic guidance on when and how injunctions may best be deployed – or resisted. With Singapore’s role as a global dispute resolution hub continuing to expand, the text also serves as an indispensable reference for international practitioners dealing with cross-border litigation and arbitration connected to Singapore.
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Price:
SGD 299.00
This book is intended for students and practitioners of Singapore criminal law. It aims to teach criminal law in a realistic fashion, and to that end, integrates elements of criminal procedure, sentencing and evidence, when relevant. The book makes extensive use of learning aids such as flowcharts and diagrams, to enhance clarity and speed comprehension. Sample charges for each offence discussed are also included, to assist practitioners and students with drafting.
The structure of the book follows the progress of an actual criminal case. It begins with an overview of the criminal justice system, followed by a discussion of prosecutorial discretion. Thereafter, it discusses the substantive law on common offences in Singapore, with an emphasis on offences that are likely to be encountered in practice. The analysis of such offences includes practical applications, such as related offences that commonly occur in the same case, and possible alternative charges that may be offered upon plea of guilt. Finally, general defences in criminal law are discussed.
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About the Authors:
Alexander Woon,the main author, is Provost’s Chair and Lecturer at Singapore University of Social Sciences School of Law, where he is the course leader for Criminal Law. He was awarded the Outstanding Teaching Award in 2024. He is also a practicing criminal defence lawyer. Alexander was previously a Deputy Public Prosecutor with the Financial and Technology Crime Division of the Attorney-General’s Chambers.
Professor Walter Woon S.C.,the co-author, is Lee Kong Chian Visiting Professor of Law, at the Yong Pung How School of Law, Singapore Management University, where he teaches criminal law. He is also Emeritus Professor, at the School of Law, National University of Singapore, and an Honorary Fellow of St John’s College, University of Cambridge. Throughout his long academic career, Prof. Woon has won multiple teaching awards and authored many books, including the leading text on Singapore Company Law. Prof. Woon, a Senior Counsel, was previously Attorney-General and Public Prosecutor of Singapore.
Price:
SGD 115.00
Estoppel in Australia is the first and only comprehensive treatment of all forms of civil estoppel in Australia.
The authors map each doctrine of estoppel in a dedicated chapter that includes a simplified overview, a thorough examination of elements, evidential requirements (including the burden of proof), case notes of the key authorities, defences, considerations for pleading and precedents of pleadings. This book distils complicated doctrines into a complete and litigation-ready guide.
Every statement of principle in the text is supported by direct quotation from one or more authorities. Every appellate decision in Australia’s history has been reviewed for the purposes of drafting this book, along with key first instance Australian decisions and all authoritative English decisions.
The co-authors of the text are a former Federal Court of Australia judge and a practising barrister.
The book is aimed at practitioners of all levels of experience and students
The Chief Justice of Australia, the Honourable Stephen Gageler AC, wrote in the foreword to the book that:
… Any practitioner who has sought to rely on an estoppel will know that the task of researching the applicable law can be long and difficult, involving trawling through reported judgments to piece together bits of a puzzle of uncertain dimensions. Often those pieces do not fit together; sometimes they are contradictory. The picture that emerges can appear distorted.
This book does much to ease those burdens. The authors have provided a dedicated chapter for each of the most common species of estoppel that arise in litigation. These are taxonomized, appropriately, into three categories. The first category comprises “litigation estoppels”, being “cause of action estoppel”, “issue estoppel” and “Anshun estoppel”. The second category comprises “common law estoppels”: “estoppel by deed”, “estoppel by representation” and “estoppel by convention”. The third comprises “equitable estoppels”, being “promissory estoppel” and “proprietary estoppel”. Each chapter provides an explanation of the distinctions and similarities between the type of estoppel compared with others, and useful summaries of the key cases of each.
The book’s even greater contribution lies in the assistance it provides on matters of practice. Each chapter outlines the precise elements of the species of estoppel with which it deals, where the burden of proof lies, what evidence is needed to establish the estoppel, and any relevant defences. In every instance, the authors have grounded the text in a comprehensive and thorough citation of authority. Practitioners can rely on what has been said. Yet the book goes further. Each chapter provides helpful observations to assist practitioners with pleading the various estoppels, even going so far as to provide precedents for pleadings in a manner that is reminiscent of Bullen & Leake’s Precedents of Pleadings [Footnote: "Now in its 19th edition: see Brennan et al, Bullen & Leake & Jacob’s: Precedents of Pleadings (Sweet & Maxwell, 2022)"].
Table of Contents
Some estoppels are known by more than one name. This can cause confusion. In those cases, the relevant chapter in the text includes a disambiguation section that cuts through the confusion. To be clear this book covers all the following estoppels: litigation estoppel, cause of action estoppel, merger, claim estoppel, estoppel by record, res judicata, judgment recovered, issue estoppel, Anshun estoppel, Henderson v Henderson estoppel, estoppel by deed, estoppel by writing, the technical doctrine of estoppel, estoppel by representation, estoppel in pais, estoppel by convention, conventional estoppel, estoppel by conduct, evidentiary estoppel, promissory estoppel, quasi-estoppel, High Trees estoppel, equitable estoppel, proprietary estoppel, Ramsden v Dyson estoppel, Dillwyn v Llewelyn estoppel, estoppel by acquiescence and estoppel by encouragement.
Price:
SGD 388.70