30461 - PRIVATE AND BUSINESS LAW
Department of Law
GAIA SILVIA BALP
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
Private Law
We start by discussing the basic principles and sources of private law, and its relationship with comparative law, private international law, European law. Distinctions between common law and civil law jurisdictions will be drawn. The distinction between legal facts and legal acts, as well as the distinctions among legal positions and relations, will also be tackled. A final module is dedicated to the concept of legal personhood in order to approach the business law part with an idea of the different legal subjects that may also be involved in the business world (e.g., partnerships, corporations).
Business Law
We mainly focus on the corporation as a legal form enabling business participants to transact easily and cost-effectively through the medium of the corporate entity. Classes cover the corporation’s core legal characteristics, in terms of legal personality, limited liability, transferable shares, delegated management under a board structure, and investor ownership. Against this fundamental backdrop, the course builds on the European regulatory framework relevant to company law to discuss the corporate structure of the firm, including the board of directors and the shareholders meeting, creditor protection, and the company’s financing.
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Explain the basic features of private and business law.
- Understand the principles and rules governing economic activities.
- Identify the issues that can arise in legal relations and business transactions and correctly address them from the practical standpoint.
- Explain the legal principles and rules relevant to private and business law.
- Summarize the main features of private, contract and corporate law.
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Identify and discuss the principles and legal rules applicable to economic activities of individuals and business corporations and the rationale thereof.
- Develop analytical skills.
- Solve basic legal issues that can arise in business transactions.
Teaching methods
- Lectures
DETAILS
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Lectures include in-class discussion based on short exercises and/or stylized cases on specific issues to help students familiarize with identifying and applying the relevant legal principles or rules. Class discussion is aimed at encouraging students bring their own views, develop analytical and critical thinking and understand how the topics covered during the course are applied in practice.
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Regular attendance is very highly recommended, both in order to more easily familiarize with the issues covered and the analytical tools to be employed to address them, and because taking good class notes is of great help in preparing both parts of the exam.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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x | x |
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Students’ assessment is based on a written exam, equally split between Private Law and Business Law (50% each of the final grade), and consisting in closed-ended and open-ended questions aimed at verifying students’ ability to:
- Describe and explain key concepts of private and business law covered during the course.
- Identify and discuss the rationale of a given principle or rule of law and its application.
- Analyze basic hypotheticals by identifying the relevant issues and come up with a meaningful solution based on the analytical tools covered during the course.
Students can take a partial (midterm) written exam covering the first part of the course (Private Law) and complete the written exam at the end of the course covering its second part (Business Law). The weight is: 50% for the partial exam and 50% for the end of term exam.
Alternatively, students can take a final, general written exam covering both parts of the course and accounting for 100% of the final grade (50%+50%, as mentioned above).
The detailed structure of the exam is announced at course start. No distinction between attending and non-attending students applies.
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Study materials – in addition to students’ class notes which greatly help preparing for the exam – include the slide sets prepared by the instructors, the cases and or/edited notes and other materials to be uploaded to the Bboard platform, and the textbooks adopted.
Materials & Textbooks:
a) Private Law:
Students are responsible for the teaching materials discussed in class and available on the Bboard platform (including slides), as well as for the following parts of P. Sirena, Introduction to Private Law, 3rd edn, il Mulino, 2021: Ch. 1 (para. 1 and 5), Ch. 3 (except for para. 1 and 2), Ch. 4 (except for para. 1), Ch. 6, Ch. 7 (except for para. 4), Ch. 8, Ch. 9, Ch. 10 (except for para 4.3), Ch. 11. The parts of the text printed in a smaller font and indented, as well as the footnotes, can be read for sake of information but shall not be covered for evaluation purposes.
b) Business Law:
Students are responsible only for the topics discussed in the class. In addition to student class notes, students are responsible for all teaching materials delivered through Blackboard, which include lecture slides, as well as notes and texts on relevant topics.