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Series

Contracts

2014

California Western School of Law

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Law

Wrap Contract Morass, Nancy Kim Jan 2014

Wrap Contract Morass, Nancy Kim

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Situational Duress And The Aberrance Of Electronic Contracts, Nancy Kim Jan 2014

Situational Duress And The Aberrance Of Electronic Contracts, Nancy Kim

Faculty Scholarship

This article explains how the aberrant nature of electronic contracts has unique effects. Companies take advantage of these unique effects and use electronic contracts in a coercive manner. This article proposes the new defense of “situational duress” to address the exploitative use of electronic contracts in certain situations.

Part I explains why electronic contracts are aberrant and explains how the developing law in this area deviates from traditional contract doctrine. This section also discusses how the electronic form affects consumer behavior and understanding of contract terms. Part II provides background to the traditional doctrine of duress and introduces the concept …


Boilerplate And Consent, Nancy Kim Jan 2014

Boilerplate And Consent, Nancy Kim

Faculty Scholarship

In Margaret Jane Radin's book, Boilerplate: The Fine Print, Vanishing Rights, and the Rule of Law, Radin argues that boilerplate is a social problem leading to normative and democratic degradation of important rights. In his review of Radin’s book, Omri Ben-Shahar outlines two approaches to regulation by boilerplate. He labels the first as “autonomism,” which asks “how such one-sided dictation of terms by firms fits within a liberal account of good social order, of democratic control and participation, and of individual autonomy.” Ben-Shahar views Radin as representative of the autonomists. The second way of viewing regulation-by-boilerplate is “to ask …


Two Alternate Visions Of Contract Law In 2025, Nancy Kim Jan 2014

Two Alternate Visions Of Contract Law In 2025, Nancy Kim

Faculty Scholarship

Part I of this essay examines how businesses have shaped the evolution of contract’s form from the past to the present and ex-plains how courts have responded by reshaping contract law.1 Part II of this essay anticipates changes in the business landscape and explains how these changes might create new challenges for contract law. Part III predicts two alternative visions for contract law in 2025. The first is as a diminished body of law, made nearly irrelevant by other laws and preempted by private rules administered by non-judicial entities. The second vision is that of a robust contract law administered …