An account of legal professional privilege for corporations, this title examines the approaches of four major common law jurisdictions: the UK, Australia, Canada and the United States. It will act as an invaluable to guide to practitioners and judges trying to ascertain whether a corporate communication will attract privilege.
An account of legal professional privilege for corporations, this title examines the approaches of four major common law jurisdictions: the UK, Australia, Canada and the United States. It will act as an invaluable to guide to practitioners and judges trying to ascertain whether a corporate communication will attract privilege.
Andrew Higgins is a lecturer in civil procedure at the University of Oxford. He teaches civil procedure on the BCL/MJur programme, and has taught tort and contract at New College and University College Oxford. Andrew is also a practicing barrister at the Victorian Bar, specialising in complex civil litigation and class actions.
Inhaltsangabe
1: Introduction 2: The Evolving Rationale for Legal Professional Privilege 3: The Corporate Client 4: The Corporation's Legal Advisers 5: The Corporation's Purpose 6: Control of Corporate Privilege 7: Waiver and Loss of Corporate Privilege 8: The Crime-Fraud Exception and Procedural Aspects of Privilege 9: Re-examining the Scope of Corporate Privilege
1: Introduction 2: The Evolving Rationale for Legal Professional Privilege 3: The Corporate Client 4: The Corporation's Legal Advisers 5: The Corporation's Purpose 6: Control of Corporate Privilege 7: Waiver and Loss of Corporate Privilege 8: The Crime-Fraud Exception and Procedural Aspects of Privilege 9: Re-examining the Scope of Corporate Privilege
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