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6 points, SCA Band 3, 0.125 EFTSL
Refer to the specific
census and withdrawal dates for the semester(s) in which this unit is offered.
| Level | Postgraduate |
| Faculty | Faculty of Law |
| Offered | City (Melbourne) Trimester 3 2012 (On-campus split block of classes)
|
Notes
For postgraduate Law discontinuation dates, please see http://www.law.monash.edu.au/current-students/postgraduate/pg-disc-dates.html
Synopsis
This unit is built around four main topics:
- the International Trade of Goods including the contracts for sale, transport and financing of goods to and from Australia
- entry into a foreign market through the mechanisms of distributionship, agency, franchising, licensing and technology transfer
- impediments to a regulation of international trade - the impact of the GATT/WTO
- international dispute resolution - negotiation, mediation, litigation and arbitration.
Outcomes
Students who successfully complete this unit should have:
- an awareness of the kinds of legal problems that arise from international commercial transactions
- acquired an understanding of how the law of sale of goods, negotiable instruments, carriage of goods, and dispute settlement is affected when goods cross national boundaries
- a familiarity with the principal mechanisms that trading parties use to resolve or reduce those problems
- an appreciation of contemporary issues in Australia's international trading relationships
- an awareness of the ways in which government controls of various kinds may affect private international commercial transactions
- a broad knowledge of how the general problems of international trade operate in selected specific areas.
Assessment
Research assignment (3,750 words): 50%
Take-home examination (3,750 words): 50%
Chief examiner(s)
Professor Justin Malbon
Contact hours
Students enrolled in this unit will be provided with 24 contact hours of seminars per semester whether intensive, semi-intensive, or semester-long offering. Students will be expected to do the reading set for class, and to undertake additional research and reading applicable to a six credit point unit.