


Printed Book
Author :
Kevin McCormac; Philip Brown; Olwen Davies; Malcolm Dodds
Publication Date:
2025-12-19
Quantity
HKD 4,500.00
Dispatched from overseas. Estimated delivery 3-6 weeks.
ISBN:
9780414132115
jurisdiction:
UK
Part of the Common Law Library series, Phipson on Evidence is the leading work on civil and criminal evidence. It examines in detail all aspects of the principles and procedures making up the law of evidence. Coverage includes the admission of evidence, the standard of proof, the attendance of witnesses, good and bad character, legal professional privilege, hearsay, expert evidence, confessions, judicial discretion and many other evidential issues.
Key Features
• Leading work and authority on civil and criminal evidence, frequently quoted in court
• Written by a prominent team of expert authors, with excellent balance between leading practitioners and academics
• Fully updates all changes brought in by the Civil Procedure Rules and the Criminal Procedure Rules
• Examines in detail all aspects of the complex principles and procedures which make up the law of evidence including admission of evidence, evidence taken or served prior to a trial, the rules of evidence during the course of a trial and the examination of witnesses
• Considers the burden and standard of proof
• Discusses all aspects of good and bad character
• Includes analysis of privilege and facts excluded by public policy
• Examines hearsay in civil and criminal proceedings
• Looks at the exclusion and inclusion of extrinsic evidence
• Examines the judicial discretion to admit or exclude evidence
• Considers a broad range of case law, including that of the Commonwealth
The new edition considers a number of important legal developments, including:
• Discussion of the Privy Council decision in Jardine Strategic Ltd v Oasis Investments Master Fund Ltd (No.2) [2025] UKPC 34, in which the Privy Council held that the longstanding principle of English law that companies generally cannot claim legal advice privilege against their shareholders "forms no part of the law of Bermuda, and that it ought not to continue to be recognised in England and Wales".
• The decision in IBG v G [2024] EWCOP 13, which considered the application of the correct test for the admissibility of similar fact evidence in Court of Protection proceedings.
• The scope and use of expert assessors, appointed to assist the Court pursuant to CPR r31.15, which was considered by the Court of Appeal in Laidley v. Metropolitan Housing Trust Ltd [2025] EWCA Civ 448.
Employment Law & Practice in Hong Kong is a comprehensive, current and convenient employment law resource. The Third Edition captures the considerable developments in this area of law in the nine years since the previous edition, updated by a mostly new team of contributors comprising of experienced barristers and solicitors.
Available formats
Book & eBook
eBook
Price
(starting at)
HKD 4,410.00
HKD 4,900.00
Employment Law & Practice in Hong Kong is a comprehensive, current and convenient employment law resource. The Third Edition captures the considerable developments in this area of law in the nine years since the previous edition, updated by a mostly new team of contributors comprising of experienced barristers and solicitors.
Available formats
eBook
Book & eBook
Price
(starting at)
HKD 3,748.50
HKD 4,165.00
Part of the Common Law Library series, Phipson on Evidence is the leading work on civil and criminal evidence. It examines in detail all aspects of the principles and procedures making up the law of evidence. Coverage includes the admission of evidence, the standard of proof, the attendance of witnesses, good and bad character, legal professional privilege, hearsay, expert evidence, confessions, judicial discretion and many other evidential issues.
Key Features
• Leading work and authority on civil and criminal evidence, frequently quoted in court
• Written by a prominent team of expert authors, with excellent balance between leading practitioners and academics
• Fully updates all changes brought in by the Civil Procedure Rules and the Criminal Procedure Rules
• Examines in detail all aspects of the complex principles and procedures which make up the law of evidence including admission of evidence, evidence taken or served prior to a trial, the rules of evidence during the course of a trial and the examination of witnesses
• Considers the burden and standard of proof
• Discusses all aspects of good and bad character
• Includes analysis of privilege and facts excluded by public policy
• Examines hearsay in civil and criminal proceedings
• Looks at the exclusion and inclusion of extrinsic evidence
• Examines the judicial discretion to admit or exclude evidence
• Considers a broad range of case law, including that of the Commonwealth
The new edition considers a number of important legal developments, including:
• Discussion of the Privy Council decision in Jardine Strategic Ltd v Oasis Investments Master Fund Ltd (No.2) [2025] UKPC 34, in which the Privy Council held that the longstanding principle of English law that companies generally cannot claim legal advice privilege against their shareholders "forms no part of the law of Bermuda, and that it ought not to continue to be recognised in England and Wales".
• The decision in IBG v G [2024] EWCOP 13, which considered the application of the correct test for the admissibility of similar fact evidence in Court of Protection proceedings.
• The scope and use of expert assessors, appointed to assist the Court pursuant to CPR r31.15, which was considered by the Court of Appeal in Laidley v. Metropolitan Housing Trust Ltd [2025] EWCA Civ 448.
Available formats
eBook
Price
(starting at)
HKD 4,500.00
Part of the Common Law Library series, Phipson on Evidence is the leading work on civil and criminal evidence. It examines in detail all aspects of the principles and procedures making up the law of evidence. Coverage includes the admission of evidence, the standard of proof, the attendance of witnesses, good and bad character, legal professional privilege, hearsay, expert evidence, confessions, judicial discretion and many other evidential issues.
Key Features
• Leading work and authority on civil and criminal evidence, frequently quoted in court
• Written by a prominent team of expert authors, with excellent balance between leading practitioners and academics
• Fully updates all changes brought in by the Civil Procedure Rules and the Criminal Procedure Rules
• Examines in detail all aspects of the complex principles and procedures which make up the law of evidence including admission of evidence, evidence taken or served prior to a trial, the rules of evidence during the course of a trial and the examination of witnesses
• Considers the burden and standard of proof
• Discusses all aspects of good and bad character
• Includes analysis of privilege and facts excluded by public policy
• Examines hearsay in civil and criminal proceedings
• Looks at the exclusion and inclusion of extrinsic evidence
• Examines the judicial discretion to admit or exclude evidence
• Considers a broad range of case law, including that of the Commonwealth
The new edition considers a number of important legal developments, including:
• Discussion of the Privy Council decision in Jardine Strategic Ltd v Oasis Investments Master Fund Ltd (No.2) [2025] UKPC 34, in which the Privy Council held that the longstanding principle of English law that companies generally cannot claim legal advice privilege against their shareholders "forms no part of the law of Bermuda, and that it ought not to continue to be recognised in England and Wales".
• The decision in IBG v G [2024] EWCOP 13, which considered the application of the correct test for the admissibility of similar fact evidence in Court of Protection proceedings.
• The scope and use of expert assessors, appointed to assist the Court pursuant to CPR r31.15, which was considered by the Court of Appeal in Laidley v. Metropolitan Housing Trust Ltd [2025] EWCA Civ 448.
Available formats
Printed Book
Price
(starting at)
HKD 4,500.00
Part of the Common Law Library series, Phipson on Evidence is the leading work on civil and criminal evidence. It examines in detail all aspects of the principles and procedures making up the law of evidence. Coverage includes the admission of evidence, the standard of proof, the attendance of witnesses, good and bad character, legal professional privilege, hearsay, expert evidence, confessions, judicial discretion and many other evidential issues.
Key Features
• Leading work and authority on civil and criminal evidence, frequently quoted in court
• Written by a prominent team of expert authors, with excellent balance between leading practitioners and academics
• Fully updates all changes brought in by the Civil Procedure Rules and the Criminal Procedure Rules
• Examines in detail all aspects of the complex principles and procedures which make up the law of evidence including admission of evidence, evidence taken or served prior to a trial, the rules of evidence during the course of a trial and the examination of witnesses
• Considers the burden and standard of proof
• Discusses all aspects of good and bad character
• Includes analysis of privilege and facts excluded by public policy
• Examines hearsay in civil and criminal proceedings
• Looks at the exclusion and inclusion of extrinsic evidence
• Examines the judicial discretion to admit or exclude evidence
• Considers a broad range of case law, including that of the Commonwealth
The new edition considers a number of important legal developments, including:
• Discussion of the Privy Council decision in Jardine Strategic Ltd v Oasis Investments Master Fund Ltd (No.2) [2025] UKPC 34, in which the Privy Council held that the longstanding principle of English law that companies generally cannot claim legal advice privilege against their shareholders "forms no part of the law of Bermuda, and that it ought not to continue to be recognised in England and Wales".
• The decision in IBG v G [2024] EWCOP 13, which considered the application of the correct test for the admissibility of similar fact evidence in Court of Protection proceedings.
• The scope and use of expert assessors, appointed to assist the Court pursuant to CPR r31.15, which was considered by the Court of Appeal in Laidley v. Metropolitan Housing Trust Ltd [2025] EWCA Civ 448.
Available formats
Book & eBook
Price
(starting at)
HKD 5,850.00
Written by leading commercial law barrister and academic, Adam Kramer KC, this work, now in its 4th edition, has established itself as a leading practitioner text on the topic of damages in contract law and commercial disputes and is regularly referred to and cited in and by courts.
Part II is structured according to the type of breach of obligation, such as service obligations (includes commercial services, and also employment) loss of use of money, providing detailed analysis facilitating the read across from cases outside the particular practice area (most commodities lawyers don't know landlord and tenant cases, most professional negligence lawyers don't know employment cases, etc). It can be used by those in a particular area (construction, sale of goods, financial disputes) whilst also providing cases and answers outside the specialist works on those areas.
Part III deals with factual causation and actual loss.
Principles of remoteness, mitigation and legal causation are dealt with in Part IV, with Chapter 18 on causation in practice uniquely structured in categorising cases on breaks in the chain of causation by the type of event (e.g. claimant speculation, post-breach dealings with defendants, receipt of benefits from third parties).
Particular types of loss requiring separate examination are dealt with in Part V whilst other matters such as third parties and loss; negotiating damages; non-compensatory damages, concurrent claims and exclusion clauses are discussed within Part VI.
Features
• Very detailed case law coverage and very practical in approach.
• Focuses on English and Welsh law but with substantial coverage of other Common Law decisions.
• Comprehensive, covering both practical concerns/dispute patterns and academic debate.
• To aid understanding and practicality, the book is arranged by the type of complaint (eg mis-provision of services, non-payment of money or the temporary loss of use of property etc).
• In addressing causation, it divides relevant cases and rules between the breach position (what actually happened and what will happen) and non-breach position (what would or might have happened but for the breach, including loss of chance).
• When considering remoteness, mitigation and legal causation, cases are analysed and categorised on breaks in the chain of causation by type of event (eg failing to avoid the danger; failure to terminate the contract etc).
• Cases from all contractual fields are considered, not only those usually referred to (construction, sale of goods, charter parties; professional services) but also those less frequently covered in general works (such as SPAs, banking contracts, breach of exclusive jurisdiction clauses, insurance and landlord and tenant).
• Tort decisions are referred to where relevant, including full coverage of professional negligence damages.
• Detailed explanation of many practically important but often neglected areas, such as damages for lost management time, whether hedging costs are recoverable, and the how to prove lost profits.
What's New
The text has been reviewed and fully updated to take account of important case law developments, in particular:
• Barrowfen Properties v Patel (2025, Court of Appeal, causation and loss of chance)
• BP Oil International Ltd v Glencore Energy UK Ltd (2023, High Court, sale of goods)
• Cessnock City Council v 123 259 932 Pty Ltd (2024, High Court of Australia, causation and actual loss)
• Costcutter Supermarkets Group Limited v Vaish (2024, EWHC 152 (KB), causation and loss)
• Durber v PPB Entertainment Ltd (2024, High Court, damages for breach of contract)
Available formats
Book & eBook
Price
(starting at)
HKD 4,134.00
Written by leading commercial law barrister and academic, Adam Kramer KC, this work, now in its 4th edition, has established itself as a leading practitioner text on the topic of damages in contract law and commercial disputes and is regularly referred to and cited in and by courts.
Part II is structured according to the type of breach of obligation, such as service obligations (includes commercial services, and also employment) loss of use of money, providing detailed analysis facilitating the read across from cases outside the particular practice area (most commodities lawyers don't know landlord and tenant cases, most professional negligence lawyers don't know employment cases, etc). It can be used by those in a particular area (construction, sale of goods, financial disputes) whilst also providing cases and answers outside the specialist works on those areas.
Part III deals with factual causation and actual loss.
Principles of remoteness, mitigation and legal causation are dealt with in Part IV, with Chapter 18 on causation in practice uniquely structured in categorising cases on breaks in the chain of causation by the type of event (e.g. claimant speculation, post-breach dealings with defendants, receipt of benefits from third parties).
Particular types of loss requiring separate examination are dealt with in Part V whilst other matters such as third parties and loss; negotiating damages; non-compensatory damages, concurrent claims and exclusion clauses are discussed within Part VI.
Features
• Very detailed case law coverage and very practical in approach.
• Focuses on English and Welsh law but with substantial coverage of other Common Law decisions.
• Comprehensive, covering both practical concerns/dispute patterns and academic debate.
• To aid understanding and practicality, the book is arranged by the type of complaint (eg mis-provision of services, non-payment of money or the temporary loss of use of property etc).
• In addressing causation, it divides relevant cases and rules between the breach position (what actually happened and what will happen) and non-breach position (what would or might have happened but for the breach, including loss of chance).
• When considering remoteness, mitigation and legal causation, cases are analysed and categorised on breaks in the chain of causation by type of event (eg failing to avoid the danger; failure to terminate the contract etc).
• Cases from all contractual fields are considered, not only those usually referred to (construction, sale of goods, charter parties; professional services) but also those less frequently covered in general works (such as SPAs, banking contracts, breach of exclusive jurisdiction clauses, insurance and landlord and tenant).
• Tort decisions are referred to where relevant, including full coverage of professional negligence damages.
• Detailed explanation of many practically important but often neglected areas, such as damages for lost management time, whether hedging costs are recoverable, and the how to prove lost profits.
What's New
The text has been reviewed and fully updated to take account of important case law developments, in particular:
• Barrowfen Properties v Patel (2025, Court of Appeal, causation and loss of chance)
• BP Oil International Ltd v Glencore Energy UK Ltd (2023, High Court, sale of goods)
• Cessnock City Council v 123 259 932 Pty Ltd (2024, High Court of Australia, causation and actual loss)
• Costcutter Supermarkets Group Limited v Vaish (2024, EWHC 152 (KB), causation and loss)
• Durber v PPB Entertainment Ltd (2024, High Court, damages for breach of contract)
Available formats
eBook
Price
(starting at)
HKD 3,180.00
Written by leading commercial law barrister and academic, Adam Kramer KC, this work, now in its 4th edition, has established itself as a leading practitioner text on the topic of damages in contract law and commercial disputes and is regularly referred to and cited in and by courts.
Part II is structured according to the type of breach of obligation, such as service obligations (includes commercial services, and also employment) loss of use of money, providing detailed analysis facilitating the read across from cases outside the particular practice area (most commodities lawyers don't know landlord and tenant cases, most professional negligence lawyers don't know employment cases, etc). It can be used by those in a particular area (construction, sale of goods, financial disputes) whilst also providing cases and answers outside the specialist works on those areas.
Part III deals with factual causation and actual loss.
Principles of remoteness, mitigation and legal causation are dealt with in Part IV, with Chapter 18 on causation in practice uniquely structured in categorising cases on breaks in the chain of causation by the type of event (e.g. claimant speculation, post-breach dealings with defendants, receipt of benefits from third parties).
Particular types of loss requiring separate examination are dealt with in Part V whilst other matters such as third parties and loss; negotiating damages; non-compensatory damages, concurrent claims and exclusion clauses are discussed within Part VI.
Features
• Very detailed case law coverage and very practical in approach.
• Focuses on English and Welsh law but with substantial coverage of other Common Law decisions.
• Comprehensive, covering both practical concerns/dispute patterns and academic debate.
• To aid understanding and practicality, the book is arranged by the type of complaint (eg mis-provision of services, non-payment of money or the temporary loss of use of property etc).
• In addressing causation, it divides relevant cases and rules between the breach position (what actually happened and what will happen) and non-breach position (what would or might have happened but for the breach, including loss of chance).
• When considering remoteness, mitigation and legal causation, cases are analysed and categorised on breaks in the chain of causation by type of event (eg failing to avoid the danger; failure to terminate the contract etc).
• Cases from all contractual fields are considered, not only those usually referred to (construction, sale of goods, charter parties; professional services) but also those less frequently covered in general works (such as SPAs, banking contracts, breach of exclusive jurisdiction clauses, insurance and landlord and tenant).
• Tort decisions are referred to where relevant, including full coverage of professional negligence damages.
• Detailed explanation of many practically important but often neglected areas, such as damages for lost management time, whether hedging costs are recoverable, and the how to prove lost profits.
What's New
The text has been reviewed and fully updated to take account of important case law developments, in particular:
• Barrowfen Properties v Patel (2025, Court of Appeal, causation and loss of chance)
• BP Oil International Ltd v Glencore Energy UK Ltd (2023, High Court, sale of goods)
• Cessnock City Council v 123 259 932 Pty Ltd (2024, High Court of Australia, causation and actual loss)
• Costcutter Supermarkets Group Limited v Vaish (2024, EWHC 152 (KB), causation and loss)
• Durber v PPB Entertainment Ltd (2024, High Court, damages for breach of contract)
Available formats
Printed Book
Price
(starting at)
HKD 3,180.00
International Corruption provides a comprehensive guide to UK and international anti-corruption legislation and caselaw concerning the bribery of foreign officials. Of particular focus is the process of a corruption investigation, the powers regulators hold, and the steps companies can take with regards to ensuring compliance minimising liability. Key legislation covered includes the Bribery Act 2010, the Crime and Security Act 2010, the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act 1997, the OECD Anti-Bribery Convention, and the anti-corruption regimes in other jurisdictions around the world.
Key features:
New to this edition:
Available formats
Book & eBook
Price
(starting at)
HKD 3,042.00
Lloyd and Freeman's Introduction to Jurisprudence is the leading textbook on jurisprudence in the English-speaking world. It enables the reader to develop a good understanding of the theories of the different schools of jurisprudence, and to appreciate the contributions made to legal theory by leading jurists and others, from ancient times to the present day.
Lloyd combines a substantial text with extracts from a wide range of authoritative sources. The works of more than 150 jurists are extracted, from Aristotle to Judith Butler, and beyond. These are supported by detailed and well-documented introductory sections which offer critical insight into the texts. Students and their teachers will profit from having in one book a wide-ranging compendium of legal thought. Lloyd is a library in itself.
This tenth edition includes significant reorganisation of the text into two distinct sections: Schools of Thought and Themes; together with 11 new extracts from modern sources, bringing the debate right up to date.
Lloyd and Freeman's Introduction to Jurisprudence offers both text and library, enabling students to find, comprehend and evaluate the core materials, classical and contemporary, in one of the most difficult but exciting of disciplines.
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(starting at)
HKD 708.00
Conflicts of Interest is an essential work that provides a comprehensive examination of the law relating to conflicts of interest. This authoritative resource offers guidance on the core principles of conflict law, its obligations and duties, offering practitioners and researchers a thorough understanding of this crucial area. It helps the user avoid potential conflicts of interest and provides practical advice and remedies for those that arise. The work covers:
The seventh edition has been fully updated, including a wholesale revision of the Arbitration chapter to reflect the decisions in Aiteo and in Halliburton v Chubb. It also covers a number of key recent cases, including:
Available formats
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Price
(starting at)
HKD 3,888.00
Conflicts of Interest is an essential work that provides a comprehensive examination of the law relating to conflicts of interest. This authoritative resource offers guidance on the core principles of conflict law, its obligations and duties, offering practitioners and researchers a thorough understanding of this crucial area. It helps the user avoid potential conflicts of interest and provides practical advice and remedies for those that arise. The work covers:
The seventh edition has been fully updated, including a wholesale revision of the Arbitration chapter to reflect the decisions in Aiteo and in Halliburton v Chubb. It also covers a number of key recent cases, including:
Available formats
eBook
Price
(starting at)
HKD 2,988.00
Conflicts of Interest is an essential work that provides a comprehensive examination of the law relating to conflicts of interest. This authoritative resource offers guidance on the core principles of conflict law, its obligations and duties, offering practitioners and researchers a thorough understanding of this crucial area. It helps the user avoid potential conflicts of interest and provides practical advice and remedies for those that arise. The work covers:
The seventh edition has been fully updated, including a wholesale revision of the Arbitration chapter to reflect the decisions in Aiteo and in Halliburton v Chubb. It also covers a number of key recent cases, including:
Available formats
Printed Book
Price
(starting at)
HKD 2,988.00
Available formats
Book & eBook
eBook
Price
(starting at)
HKD 1,750.00
Trusted by professionals for over 100 years, this acclaimed resource sets the standard in non-marine commercial insurance law. With expert commentary on the latest legal developments and a reputation for clarity and authority, it's an indispensable tool for staying ahead in a complex and evolving field.
It explains foundational aspects of UK insurance law—such as the principles of misrepresentation and utmost good faith—and provides an in-depth look at the concept of loss, including key issues like causation and notification requirements. The book also explores specific insurance sectors, with chapters covering third-party liability, the rights of third parties against insurers, coordination between multiple insurers, and the legal treatment of double insurance.
Since the last edition there have been the usual steady stream of reported cases and regulatory developments. Notable examples are cases arising as a consequence of the COVID-19 lockdown dealing with, among other things, important questions of construction and causation, decisions on insurable interest, the application of s.11 of the Insurance Act 2015, illegality, good faith and exclusion of the 2015 Act's provisions, the Third Parties (Rights against Insurers) Act 2010 and aggregation clauses in liability policies. We also consider the new "consumer duty" issued by the Financial Conduct Authority.
Specific discussion focusses on the following cases:
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(starting at)
HKD 7,164.00
Marsden and Gault forms part of the highly respected British Shipping Law Series. It serves as an in-depth guide to the specialist and self-contained area of Collision and Loss in maritime law examining recent cases and convention developments. The commentary proceeds seamlessly from navigational fault and the interpretation of the Collision Regulations, towards special liability regimes and pollution.
Updates to the 16th edition include:
The 16th edition also covers all relevant cases, including:
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(starting at)
HKD 5,616.00
The 2026 edition of Archbold: Criminal Pleading, Evidence & Practice, the leading criminal court book for the Crown Court, publishes in October 2025 in print and eBook formats.
First published over 200 years ago, Archbold 2026 continues the ethos of being an invaluable aid to practising criminal law in the Crown Court and being reliable, current and comprehensive. The new edition is as up-to-date and authoritative as ever featuring amendments and regulations made by new legislation, such as the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025. Secondary legislation includes changes to corporate criminal liability introduced by the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 and offences introduced by the Online Safety Act 2023 brought into force. Technical amendments to sentencing have been brought into force to ease space in prisons, such as changes to release introduced throughout the year: whether by amendment to the period of time determinate sentence prisoners have been required to serve, an extension of the availability of home detention curfew, and changes to the approach to public protection decisions.
The Criminal Procedure Rules have been reconsolidated and republished as The Criminal Procedure Rules 2025 (SI 2025/909). The Main Work has been updated to reflect the new rules and they can be found in their entirety in Appendix 1 of the Supplement.
Available formats
Printed Book
Price
(starting at)
HKD 4,956.00
The 2026 edition of Archbold: Criminal Pleading, Evidence & Practice, the leading criminal court book for the Crown Court, publishes in October 2025 in print and eBook formats.
First published over 200 years ago, Archbold 2026 continues the ethos of being an invaluable aid to practising criminal law in the Crown Court and being reliable, current and comprehensive. The new edition is as up-to-date and authoritative as ever featuring amendments and regulations made by new legislation, such as the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025. Secondary legislation includes changes to corporate criminal liability introduced by the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 and offences introduced by the Online Safety Act 2023 brought into force. Technical amendments to sentencing have been brought into force to ease space in prisons, such as changes to release introduced throughout the year: whether by amendment to the period of time determinate sentence prisoners have been required to serve, an extension of the availability of home detention curfew, and changes to the approach to public protection decisions.
The Criminal Procedure Rules have been reconsolidated and republished as The Criminal Procedure Rules 2025 (SI 2025/909). The Main Work has been updated to reflect the new rules and they can be found in their entirety in Appendix 1 of the Supplement.
Available formats
Book & eBook
Price
(starting at)
HKD 5,148.00
The 2026 edition of Archbold: Criminal Pleading, Evidence & Practice, the leading criminal court book for the Crown Court, publishes in October 2025 in print and eBook formats.
First published over 200 years ago, Archbold 2026 continues the ethos of being an invaluable aid to practising criminal law in the Crown Court and being reliable, current and comprehensive. The new edition is as up-to-date and authoritative as ever featuring amendments and regulations made by new legislation, such as the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025. Secondary legislation includes changes to corporate criminal liability introduced by the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 and offences introduced by the Online Safety Act 2023 brought into force. Technical amendments to sentencing have been brought into force to ease space in prisons, such as changes to release introduced throughout the year: whether by amendment to the period of time determinate sentence prisoners have been required to serve, an extension of the availability of home detention curfew, and changes to the approach to public protection decisions.
The Criminal Procedure Rules have been reconsolidated and republished as The Criminal Procedure Rules 2025 (SI 2025/909). The Main Work has been updated to reflect the new rules and they can be found in their entirety in Appendix 1 of the Supplement.
Available formats
eBook
Price
(starting at)
HKD 4,956.00
Covers standard industry documents providing the legal framework for upstream, midstream and downstream petroleum contracts, with accompanying commentary on their application to energy transactions and related matters
• Looks at issues relating to mineral laws, including licences, and host government and inter-governmental agreements
• Examines preliminary participation contracts, including agreements and concessions relating to confidentiality, area of mutual interest, joint study, joint bidding and joint wells; data trade and sharing contracts; and enforceability of reasonable endeavour and best endeavour covenants
• Assesses model form joint operating agreements, including contents, accounting procedure, and trust deeds
• Examines drilling, procurement and services contracts
• Discusses the principles of unitisation and unitisation agreements, and considers pooling and other joint development options, pre-unit agreements, UUOA and JOA relationships, principles of petroleum lifting and commingling, balancing agreements, title interests, allocation and attribution/substitution agreements
• Advises on petroleum management contracts including those for provision of petroleum processing and operational services; third party access to infrastructure, project structures for gas liquefaction and LNG regasification, contracts for terminal access and provision of services
• Deals with oil, gas and LNG sales contracts dealing in detail with their respective terms
• Goes through shipping contracts, including ship leasing, time and voyage charter-party terms, contracts of affreightment and bills of lading
• Addresses pipeline transportation contracts, looking at the transporter and shipper perspectives, pipeline system rules, sales and transportation contract interfaces, cross-border pipeline investment protection, agreements for pipeline crossing, proximity and tie-in, and pipeline capacity management agreements
• Extends coverage to interest sale and purchase contracts, including asset exchange contracts, farm out and earn out agreements, addressing pre-emption, due diligence, representations and warranties
• Features decommissioning and security contracts
• Includes contractual clauses for the construction of petroleum infrastructure
• Examines corporate and project finance agreements, taking into account contingent consideration, royalty deeds, volumetric production payments, reserves-based lending agreements, debt prioritisation and security interests
• Examines options for the negotiated, arbitration and judicial resolution of disputes involving oil and gas contracts and projects, including governing law and jurisdiction provisions
• Covers dispute resolution
Available formats
eBook
Price
(starting at)
HKD 4,788.00