The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Franchising: Cases, Materials, and Problems
Franchising: Cases, Materials, and Problems

Franchising: Cases, Materials, and Problems

Current price: $195.00
Loading Inventory...
Get it at Barnes and Noble

Size: OS

Get it at Barnes and Noble
As an area of academic study, however, franchise law is a new kid on the block. Many casebooks are constructed by academics who have spent the primary portion of their careers in teaching environments. This casebook is different. Some of the contributors are full-time faculty members and some have taught franchising in various law schools, but most have been private practitioners for the bulk of their careers. Collectively, they've have spent more than 500 years working with clients in the real world and thinking about the kinds of questions that the book explores. They are some of the best and the brightest, and the most experienced in the field of franchise law, and their real-world experience brings a blend of theoretical and practical perspectives on the legal and policy issues raised by franchising as a business model to this unique casebook. is designed for use in a franchise law course. The introduction and the chapter on the history of franchising offer broad perspectives on the material that later chapters explore in greater depth. A teacher who wishes to emphasize the role of intellectual property concepts in franchise law can assign the chapters on trademarks, trade secrets, and copyright in full as well as parts of other chapters. A teacher who prefers to emphasize the regulatory aspects of franchise law can assign the chapters on disclosure and relationship laws in full, supplemented by parts of other chapters. Together, the chapters on regulation raise provocative questions concerning American federalism. The chapter on other types of business relationships highlights both the difficulty of defining the legal term franchise" with precision and the remarkable variety of business relationships that franchise laws may govern.
Powered by Adeptmind