This unit offers a detailed study of the content and role of the law of trusts in the management of assets. It examines conceptual analyses of the function served by trust law doctrine (including asset-partitioning, contractarianism and the irreducible core of trusts), as well as considering in depth the core doctrines that regulate the operation of intentionally created trust arrangements (such as trust accounting, the mechanisms for controlling trust powers, information rights, arbitration clauses, purpose trusts and enforcers). It also addresses some of the commercial uses to which trusts are put and the utility (or otherwise) of trusts in those settings. The focus is on traditional ('on-shore') jurisdictions, such as Australia and England, but consideration will also be given to the regimes in some of the 'off-shore' jurisdictions which are known for their innovation in trust laws.
Unit details and rules
Academic unit | Law |
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Credit points | 6 |
Prerequisites
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LAWS5015 |
Corequisites
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None |
Prohibitions
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|
LAWS3502 |
Assumed knowledge
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None |
Available to study abroad and exchange students | Yes |
Teaching staff
Coordinator | Matthew Conaglen, matthew.conaglen@sydney.edu.au |
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Lecturer(s) | Matthew Conaglen, matthew.conaglen@sydney.edu.au |