Illinois Commercial Real Estate


Book Description

Illinois Commercial Real Estate is a practical handbook and unique resource for investors, developers, brokers, lenders, attorneys, and others interested in commercial real estate projects in Illinois. If you are involved in commercial real estateespecially in Illinoisthis book is a must-have addition to your library. Sometimes humorous and always useful, Illinois Commercial Real Estate provides best-practice guidance gleaned from the authors lifetime of experience growing up in a real estate family and his thirty-seven-plus years as a commercial real estate attorney. It is packed with pearls of wisdom acquired by working in the trenches with creative clients actively engaged in the commercial real estate business. The authors practical approach to commercial real estate due diligence and closing and the invaluable insights and closing checklists he shares serve as benchmarks for commercial real estate transactions throughout the USA.




What Does Risk Mean in This New “Risky Space Business”?


Book Description

In What Does Risk Mean in this New “Risky Space Business”?, Dr. Carminati offers a first-of-its-kind analysis of US tort law as it applies to commercial spaceflight operations, including an in-depth review of pre-emption, federal cross-waivers, and state tort defenses.




North Eastern Reporter


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Evans V. Shannon


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Illinois Appellate Reports


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Cartner on the International Law of the Shipmaster


Book Description

This unique book rethinks and rewrites the previous edition. It categorises simply the nine interactive legal duties of the shipmaster, analysing and relating them to laws and conventions within a single volume. Cartner on the International Law of the Shipmaster contends that command depends on decision-making, and that shipmasters are not provided sufficient, timely, relevant, and pertinent information for command decisions. The book proposes voyage planning follow the spacecraft model of the USA's National Aeronautics and Space Administration, providing readers with a metric for command. It constructively criticises the conventions and management and is aimed at reducing catastrophes by focusing on the hitherto elusive human factor in the shipmaster. Cartner proposes that command at sea be its own profession and discipline with those called to it specifically trained in its intricacies; he argues that current ships are not designed to be command-worthy or security-worthy and that management should reorder its relationships with shipmasters as tactical managers afloat. The insights the book provides are an invaluable aid to decision making for the modern civil commander and anyone association with this pivotal and essential profession. This book is a necessary reference and guide for shipmasters, technologists, naval architects, regulators, underwriters, students, practitioners and courts of maritime law and command worldwide.