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Table of contents:
The importance of Insurance Law to the effective underpinning of many branches of law is self-evident and yet,until relatively recently, it is still not a widely taught subject in its own right. One reason might be that there is no suitable text book that attempts to bring together the materials: cases legislation, law reform proposals, articles, regulatory codes of conduct thus a range of essential, but specialist, ingredients which students and libraries might find difficult and expensive to gather together. The materials are essential to the teaching and study of the subject. Each topic however is introduced by a clear text that will provide a useful and readable account which can be used by the reader as a stand alone overview of insurance law topics and be of crucial assistance at examination time. While the book concentrates on general principles of insurance law, it inevitably relies on examples (cases and legislation) taken from the main branches of motor, property, marine and liability insurance.
Contents:
A General Introduction
- Insurable Interest
- Making and Breaking the Insurance Contract
- Misrepresentation and Non-disclosure
- Warranties and conditions
- Insurance Intermediaries
- Construction of the policy
- Claims
- Subrogation and Contribution
- Third Parties(Rights against Insurers) Act 1930
- The Financial Ombudsman service: The Insurance Ombudsman
Brief Description:
The importance of insurance as a key element in the underpinning of many branches of law is self-evident, most obviously the law of torts, and yet until relatively recently it was not a widely taught subject in its own right.
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