Includes bibliographical references (pages 267-280) and index.
CONTENTS NOTE
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Prelims; Preface; Contents; Table of Cases; 1 Introduction; Part I General Part; 2 General Part of the Law of Damages; 3 Categories of Loss; Part II Methods of Limiting Damages; 4 Causation; 5 Foreseeability; 6 Mitigation; Part III Proof of Loss and Calculation of Dama; 7 Standards of Proving Loss and Determining the Amount of Damages; 8 Calculation of Damages (Part I); 9 Calculation of Damages (Part II); Bibliography; Index.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
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"The book aims to explore the remedy of damages in international sales transactions. Its focus is on the international contract law instruments such as the Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG), the UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts, and the Principles of European Contract Law. The issues addressed in the book include: the basis for the right to claim damages, definition and purpose of damages, the idea of limiting damages, principles underlying the award of damages, classification of losses and heads of recoverable losses, causation. foreseeability, mitigation, standards of proving losses and methods of calculating and determining the amount of damages. The book, draws on the experience of some major legal systems in dealing with contract damages as well as on the body of cases and scholarly writings on the international instruments. In doing so, the book attempts to provide a justification for the existing rules on damages, highlights the problems in their interpretation and application, and proposes solutions to the existing problems in the light of relevant policies and goals pursued by the international instruments. The work will be of interest to practitioners involved in international commercial transactions, scholars and students interested in international commercial and comparative contract law."--BOOK JACKET.