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Lecture notes

Business Law II class notes

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Business Law II class notes from year Includes all the cases and all the studied material you need to pass exams + comments on things that the professor mentioned could be at the exam I'm down to sell it at a better price than the one on the platform just email:

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Uploaded on
June 1, 2025
Number of pages
37
Written in
2024/2025
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Lecture notes
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Stephanie gardner
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😶
Lecture 1: What is Business Law?
Type Lecture

Reviewed

the Law = enforceable rules governing relationships among individuals and between individuals and their society

sets out rights, duties and obligations of citizens



Leads to “Stability and Predictability”:

why? because the law regulates conduct in society

at personal level → citizens need to be able to determine “right from wrong”

at business level → degree of “legal certainty” in business dealings



From a business POV, what is legally right and wrong? → IT DEPENDS:

the law has dealt with business issues in very different ways at different times and places in history

it reflects values and beliefs of society or its ruling group

there’s a close relationship between morality and any rule that society will enforce



KEY QUESTIONS FOR INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS PEOPLE:

how will the local, legal environment affect my business decision making?

degree of predictability?

business implications?

many different laws can affect a single business decision



HYUNDAY CASE STUDY
labour law → one of the lowest wages in the country + no paid lunches, breaks, vacation, no health insurance
or pensions

Georgia is anti unions → keeps salaries low

tax cuts and tax deals ⇒ tax incentives (tax break on batteries, no social security tax, tax credit for EVs, low
property tax)

minimum working age is 14

property law

Georgia provides free workforce training

Limited Liability Protection

no mandatory retirement (+ no retirement age) ⇒ no mandatory retirement funds

strong IP laws

unpaid vacation, unpaid maternity leave




Lecture 1: What is Business Law? 1

, Certain laws were enacted throughout time, evolved and developed for different purposes:

Public law ⇒ to proscribe certain kinds of behavior that society finds objectionable, concerns a citizen’s
relationship with society (includes constitutional, administrative, and criminal law and many forms of antitrust
law,environmental law, labor law, and securities regulation

Private law ⇒ to make an injured party (citizen, corporation, or other entity) whole (includes tort, agency,
contract, corporation, partnership, and property law)

Contract law ⇒ to end disputes, the law governing agreements



International Private Law = set of rules or procedural law that regulates relationships between people (or entities)
of different nationalities

determines which legal systems and law of which jurisdiction will apply to a legal dispute among
individuals involving a foreign element → “Conflict of Laws”



International Law = transnational rules that national courts use to regulate 3 primary relationships:

relationship between 2 nations

relationship between a nation and an individual

relationship between people/entities from different countries

Sources:

international conventions and treaties, customs/general practice

widely accepted general principles of law

all other sources used in national law (such as judicial decisions and scholarly writings)



CIVIL VS COMMON LAW:

Civil Law: Common Law:

“Continental Europe Approach” “Anglo-Saxon Tradition”




Lecture 1: What is Business Law? 2

, oldest and most influential legal system law found on a case-by-case basis

roman-germanic: codified law based on Roman court decisions rather than formal codes →
Code precedent

legal rules set out in 1 comprehensive and overall accumulation of judicial decisions → law
systematised code and accompanying statutes (ex: is developed and pronounced by courts
family law, property law, succession law, law of
Stare Decisis (stand by the decision)→ requires
obligations, commercial law, labour law)
courts to follow their own precedents, binds all
law found in the code ( 1 systemised code, a single of the lower courts of a jurisdiction to
comprehensiv legislative enactment) determinations of the highest court in the same
jurisdiction

much more nuanced (more difficult to find the
law)

encourages litigation (and people suing each
other) → more lawyers




Substantive Law = any body of law creating, defining, andregulating rights and obligations within the framework
of a single subject,such as contracts, torts, crimes, or property.

Pocedural Law =

HOMEWORK
3 ways the international law has helped shape your life personally:

setting 1 globally recognised system for telling time (+ processioning the length of a second needed for
cellphone networks)

universal postal network

Worldwide concert tours without artists being taxed twice

travelling easier, just with a passport

up-to-date weather forecast about your destination




Lecture 1: What is Business Law? 3

, 🥷
Lecture 2: Conflicts of Law
Type Lecture

Chapter read the extra material on German law smth smth

Reviewed

conflict of law = laws contradict themselves
criminal liability → you can be put in jail

civil liability → you would have to pay a fine



US Declaration of Independence = document declaring the independence of the American colonies from
England on July 4, 1776
US Constitution = fundamental law of the US which was ratified by the states on 1788

creates 3 branches of gov

outlines the organisation, powers, responsibilities and limits of the federal government

any law that violates the Constitution is null and void

protects individual rights by limiting the govs ability to restrict those rights




Bill of Rights:

10 amendments to US Constitution

guarantees fundamental rights and protects these rights from intrusive gov action

First Amendment = includes freedom of speech, freedom to assemble and petition, freedom of the press
and freedom of religion



Freedom of Speech:

right to engage in oral, written, and symbolic speech protected by the 1st Amendment

categories:

fully protected speech → cannot be prohibited or regulated by the government




Lecture 2: Conflicts of Law 1
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