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1 Bus. L. Rev. 1 (1980)

handle is hein.kluwer/blr0001 and id is 1 raw text is: Business
Law
Review

Consultant Editor
Keith Walmsley FCiS, Solicitor
Editor
Judy Hodgson LLB
Assistant Editor
Ruth Eldon

Vol 1  No 1   January 1980
Registered as a Newspaper
at the Post Office
Subscription April-December 1980
£36 post free, inland

conent

Competition
Competition Bill 1979             4
Profile
John Flynn                        6
In Perspective:
Employment: A Cosmetic Approach   9
Banking
Banking Act 1979                 12
International Trade and
Investment
The New Chinese Joint
Venture Law                      23
Lawyers
The Employed Lawyer              28
Companies
Companies Bill 1979 - I          30
Around the Profession             2
City News                         3
Infobank                         15
In Parliament                    32
American Newsletter              34
Brussels Newsletter              35
Book Reviews                     36
Note: The first three issues (January to
March 1980), are sent free and without
obligation.
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Business Law
Review
The Business Law Review editorial team
present this first issue and trust that
readers will find this new publication
both interesting and useful. The
emphasis will be placed on providing
practical material written by practition-
ers for practitioners.
As can be seen from this first issue,
there will be a wide coverage of rele-
vant news developments as well as
more in depth feature articles. We will
not be afraid to grasp the nettle of
difficult conceptual problems but BLR
will not dwell on theoretical issues
merely for their own interest.
Above all, BLR seeks to be a useful
working tool for its users - to save
them time and to safeguard them from
missing important developments. We
are well aware of the present plethora
of reading matter in many fields and of
the demands this makes on our readers.
We do not seek to add unnecessarily to
this burden but rather to highlight the
issues of real practical importance and
to contribute some solutions to the
problems faced by those who have to
implement and advise on the unending
flow of new legal developments.
We would welcome comments and
criticisms from our readers in order
that the BLR may continue to meet
their changing needs, and we invite let-
ters to the editor and professional news
for our Around the Profession fea-
ture (see p 2).
Europe
Some emphasis will be placed on
reporting EEC legal and business news
as it seems to us that business lawyers
have a real need for a concise and up to
date central information source which is
able to deal with the technical details
with which they must concern them-
selves.
It is to be placed on record that in
Britain, lawyers have been in the fore-
front of those who have a serious inter-

est and involvement in EEC affairs.
This is perhaps partly because one of
the most tangible products of the
Community has been the creation of a
new body and system of law - and in
this lawyers must be said to have some
vested interest. The concern of lawyers
is evidenced by the strong Solicitors'
and Bar European Groups and in the
keen interest in EEC matters shown by
the Bar Association for Commerce
Finance and Industry and the Law Soci-
ety's Commerce and Industry Group.
These bodies have done much to alert
lawyers to the many implications of
EEC membership though unease is
shared by many business lawyers that
British concerns will soon burn their
fingers badly if they continue to show
such apathy and naivety towards EEC
rules - one thinks, for instance, of the
competition rules. There are clear signs
that the European Counission is
becoming more aggressive in its polic-
ing of EEC rules, as those who have
recently been the subject of investiga-
tive visits by inspectors from the Com-
mission Competition Directorate can
testify.
It is not the place of BLR to take a
pro Market or anti Market stance.
We are of course solidly behind the
endeavours of the British Government
to seek some redress for the obvious
inequities in the EEC budget and hope
that that some real concessions will be
forthcoming at the next meeting of the
European Council. While there is a
strong temptation to discount the views
of other member states as mere self
serving statements, there is an element
of truth in certain of their arguments
against the British case. For instance,
France has expressed a view that Bri-
tain has not taken full advantage of
Community and that had she done so,
the budget position would not be nearly
so loaded against her. There is some
truth in this view - British manufactur-
ing industry has been slow to take
advantage of the opportunities in
Europe either because of a less than
enthusiastic attitude on the part of
salesmen or more fundamentally

Copyright '2007 by Kluwer Law International. All rights reserved.
No claim asserted to original government works.

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