Browsing by Author "Boxall, Terry"
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- ItemOpen AccessThe applicability of mineral and mining rights concepts in facilitating value capture in South Africa(2015) van Heerden, Chrisjan; McGaffin, Robert; Boxall, TerrySouth Africa needs additional funds for public infrastructure investment. Value Capture could potentially be implemented as a mechanism to raise additional funding. Value Capture depends on maximising land value. Ownership constraints to land development prevent land value from being maximised. The study uses doctrinal legal research to investigate how the principles found in South African mineral rights legislation overcome ownership constraints to developing mineral rich land to its highest and best use. The study also investigates how these mineral rights principles could be applied to land in general, in order to overcome ownership constraints to development. Within this context the study demonstrates how land might be expropriated for development purposes, and how such expropriation could create opportunities for Value Capture.
- ItemRestrictedNEC3ECC Clause 10.1: An Enforceable Contractual Duty of Trust and Co-operation in the Construction Industry?(Juta, 2017-06-01) Boxall, Terry; Hutchison, Andrew; Wright, MichelleThis paper discusses the NEC3ECC (a standard form contract widely used in the South African construction industry), with particular regard to its Core Clause 10.1, which creates the obligations to act as stated in the contract and in a spirit of mutual trust and co-operation. The authors, who comprise two legal scholars and a legal practitioner, shed light on this clause, using both textual and contextual approaches. Our aim is to explore how the norms of trust and co-operation – inter-linked notions from the paradigm of relational contracting – are carried through to the performance and enforcement stages of a construction contract based on the NEC3ECC. We also investigate how these norms manifest in the realm of dispute resolution with reference to both formal, traditional legal proceedings and alternative forms of dispute resolution. Our conclusion is that the good faith duties created by clause 10.1 do not translate well into adversarial dispute resolution processes, particularly in a curial setting, and that the phrase “mutual trust and co-operation” is generally viewed as not adding much to the obligation to act as stated in the contract.
- ItemOpen Access"Oppositions, rather than heroes" : an examination of dialectical principles in the work of Tom Stoppard(1987) Smith, Patricia Anne Myers; Boxall, Terry
- ItemOpen AccessThe heroic spirit in the literature of the Great War(1989) McArthur, Kathleen Maureen; Boxall, Terry