1st Edition

Legal History and Comparative Law Essays in Honour of Albert Kilralfy

By Richard Plender Copyright 1990

    First Published in 1990. Albert Kiralfy entered King’s College London as a student in the Faculty of Laws in 1932, graduated in 1935 and took his first higher degree in the following year. Apart from War Service (1939-45), he was a teaching member of the Faculty from 1937 until 1981 when, on his nominal retirement, the University of London conferred on him the title of Professor Emeritus. Professor Kiralfy’s contribution to legal literature, continuing to this day, may be said to have begun almost immediately after graduation, with special interest in comparative law, property law and law history.

    The Life of Parliament in British Constitutional History; Seeing Justice Done; Privacy, the Press and the Public Interest; The International Dimension to Deceaseds’ Estates; The Soviet Constitutional Reforms of December 11988: an Analysis of the Changes from Draft to Law; The Uses of Comparative Law in the Law of the European Communities; Comparative Law: Home Rule(s); Private Damages Claims for Breaches of Securities; Regulation Laws: the US and UK Approaches; Obtaining Evidence Abroad; The Protocol, the Bailiwicks and the Jersey Cow; The Foundations of the Doctrine of Ultra Vires

    Biography

    Richard Plender Q.C.