Construction Law in the United Arab Emirates and the Gulf (eBook)
John Wiley & Sons (Verlag)
978-1-119-08594-2 (ISBN)
Michael Grose obtained a law degree in the UK before completing his legal training in 1993 with an international law firm in the City of London. He relocated to Dubai in 1998 where he is the head of the regional construction and projects practice of a global law firm. As a veteran of the Gulf, Michael has extensive knowledge not only of the region's laws but also the application of these laws to construction contracts and disputes. Michael frequently reviews, advises on and prepares construction contracts for major projects, bringing him into frequent contact with the FIDIC suite of contract conditions. He has drafted amendments to these conditions to adapt them for use in the Gulf and to address the most commonly arising issues. Michael has also been involved in many of the region's largest and most high profile construction and engineering disputes. As a result, he has considerable experience of conducting arbitration in the Gulf, including as an arbitrator appointed by the Dubai International Arbitration Centre. Working with licensed local advocates he has acted on numerous occasions for clients in the Gulf's domestic courts. This has included taking cases through all stages of the court proceedings, from obtaining freezing orders against bank guarantees, attending court appointed experts' meetings through to the execution of final judgments. He is also familiar with proceedings the Dubai International Financial Centre Courts having, amongst other things, acted for a main contractor in the first construction case to come to trial in the DIFC Courts. Michael has also presented at numerous conferences, including the Commercial Law Conference in Bahrain (organised by the United States Department of Commerce) for members of the region's judiciary, the inaugural international conference of the Society of Construction Law held in Singapore and the inaugural conference of the Gulf branch of the Society of Construction Law. He is recommended in the top tier of all the leading independent legal directories including Who's Who Legal, Chambers Global and Legal 500.
Construction Law in the United Arab Emirates and the Gulf is an authoritative guide to construction law in the United Arab Emirates and the Gulf. The principal theme is the contrast between construction law in an Islamic civil law jurisdiction and construction law in a common law jurisdiction. the first authoritative text on the application of the laws of the UAE extensive extracts from the region's applicable laws, all translated from Arabic, and hundreds of judgments of the most senior courts used to back up the analysis provided
Michael Grose obtained a law degree in the UK before completing his legal training in 1993 with an international law firm in the City of London. He relocated to Dubai in 1998 where he is the head of the regional construction and projects practice of a global law firm. As a veteran of the Gulf, Michael has extensive knowledge not only of the region's laws but also the application of these laws to construction contracts and disputes. Michael frequently reviews, advises on and prepares construction contracts for major projects, bringing him into frequent contact with the FIDIC suite of contract conditions. He has drafted amendments to these conditions to adapt them for use in the Gulf and to address the most commonly arising issues. Michael has also been involved in many of the region's largest and most high profile construction and engineering disputes. As a result, he has considerable experience of conducting arbitration in the Gulf, including as an arbitrator appointed by the Dubai International Arbitration Centre. Working with licensed local advocates he has acted on numerous occasions for clients in the Gulf's domestic courts. This has included taking cases through all stages of the court proceedings, from obtaining freezing orders against bank guarantees, attending court appointed experts' meetings through to the execution of final judgments. He is also familiar with proceedings the Dubai International Financial Centre Courts having, amongst other things, acted for a main contractor in the first construction case to come to trial in the DIFC Courts. Michael has also presented at numerous conferences, including the Commercial Law Conference in Bahrain (organised by the United States Department of Commerce) for members of the region's judiciary, the inaugural international conference of the Society of Construction Law held in Singapore and the inaugural conference of the Gulf branch of the Society of Construction Law. He is recommended in the top tier of all the leading independent legal directories including Who's Who Legal, Chambers Global and Legal 500.
Al-amdu lillah - finally, a proper book on construction law in the Gulf region... Michael Grose's book is an indispensable guide to anyone with an interest in the law relating to construction contracts in the Gulf region. It is practical, sensible, and based on unrivalled research. Like certain provisions of the Civil Codes, this book is mandatory --Richard Harding QC, in Construction Law International
| Erscheint lt. Verlag | 16.3.2016 |
|---|---|
| Sprache | englisch |
| Themenwelt | Recht / Steuern ► EU / Internationales Recht |
| Technik ► Bauwesen | |
| Schlagworte | Ambiguity • Bahrain • bank bonds • Baubetrieb • Bauingenieur- u. Bauwesen • Baurecht • beneficial interest • capped damages • cause • Civil Code • Civil Engineering & Construction • Commerce law • commerce law and commercial code • construction law • Construction Management • criminal damage • deceit • Delict • delict and tort • diya and arsh • Duress • FIDIC conditions • financial free zones • Fraud • Icsid • imprTvision • Inherent risk • insurance • Islamic Shari'ah • judgment debt • judicial set-off • Kuwait • labour law • Letter of Intent • liquidated damages • liquidated debt • mandatory set-off • Massenermittlung u. Bauökonomie • Massenermittlung u. Bauökonomie • misconduct • Muqawala • negligence • Negotiations • Obligation of Means • obligation of result • Oman • prevention principle • Privity • Qatar • Quantity Surveying & Construction Economics • Res judicata • riyadh convention • Saudi Arabia • sub-contract • Tort • UAE • Vereinigte Arabische Emirate • vicarious liability • wear and tear |
| ISBN-10 | 1-119-08594-2 / 1119085942 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1-119-08594-2 / 9781119085942 |
| Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR) | |
| Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt? |
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