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Dicey, Morris & Collins on the Conflict of Laws (often simply Dicey, Morris & Collins, or even just Dicey & Morris) is the leading English law textbook on the conflict of laws (ISBN 978-0-414-02453-3). It has been described as the "gold standard" in terms of academic writing on the subject, [1] and the "foremost authority on private ...
[2] [33] [34] In relation to the main subject for which the case is normally cited, the situs of shares in a company, Dicey Morris & Collins accept it as good authority, but note that it has to be read against a large group of cases which seek to impose a different situs in different situations for different purposes. [1]
Darbyshire on the English Legal System - 12th ed - Sweet & Maxwell - ISBN 978-0-414-05785-2; Dicey, A. V.; Morris, J. H. C. & Collins, Lawrence (1993). Dicey and Morris on the Conflict of Laws 12th ed. London: Sweet & Maxwell ISBN 978-0-420-48280-8; Slapper, Gary & Kelly, David (2016). The English Legal System. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138 ...
Albert Venn Dicey, KC, FBA (4 February 1835 – 7 April 1922) was a British Whig jurist and constitutional theorist. [1] He is most widely known as the author of Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution (1885). [ 2 ]
[2] He is most famous for his contributions to private international law. Whilst at Harvard he published a notable article in Harvard Law Review on the subject, [5] and he taught the subject for decades to BCL students at Oxford. But he is most famous as general editor of what is now as Dicey Morris & Collins on the Conflict of Laws.
Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution is a book by A. V. Dicey about the constitution of the United Kingdom. It was first published in 1885. Dicey was named the Vinerian Professor of English Law at the University of Oxford in 1883. [1] He began delivering the lectures that were to become Introduction on 28 April 1884. [2]
A few years later, Sir William Blackstone in his Commentaries, 14th ed. (1803), Book II, p. 346, speaking of private Acts of Parliament, said: "A law, thus made, though it binds all parties to the bill, is yet looked upon rather as a private conveyance, than as the solemn act of the legislature.
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