Smith & Roberson's Business Law 18e Richard Mann, Barry Roberts (Solutions Manual All Chapters, 100% Original Verified, A+ Grade) Part 2: Instructor's Manual: Page 2-1113 Part 1: Solutions Manual: Page 1114-1686 1 / 4
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Instructor Manual: Mann Roberts, Smith & Roberson’s Business Law 18e, 9780357364000; Chapter 01: Introduction to Law 1 © 2023 Cengage. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.Instructor Manual Mann Roberts, Smith & Roberson’s Business Law 18e, 9780357364000; Chapter 01: Introduction to Law Table of Contents Purpose and Perspective of the Chapter ..................................................................................... 2 Cengage Supplements .................................................................................................................. 2 Chapter Objectives ........................................................................................................................ 2 Key Terms ....................................................................................................................................... 2 What's New in This Chapter .......................................................................................................... 3 Chapter Outline ............................................................................................................................. 3 Discussion Questions .................................................................................................................... 8 Appendix ........................................................................................................................................ 9 Generic Rubrics .......................................................................................................................... 9 Standard Writing Rubric ............................................................................................................ 9 Standard Discussion Rubric .................................................................................................... 10
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Instructor Manual: Mann Roberts, Smith & Roberson’s Business Law 18e, 9780357364000; Chapter 01: Introduction to Law 2 © 2023 Cengage. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.Purpose and Perspective of the Chapter The purpose of this chapter is to establish a foundation for the course, by introducing key terminology and concepts that students will used through the book.Cengage Supplements The following product-level supplements provide additional information that may help you in preparing your course. They are available in the Instructor Resource Center.• PowerPoint Deck Chapter Objectives
The following objectives are addressed in this chapter:
- Describe the basic functions of law
- Distinguish between (1) law and justice and (2) law and morals
- Distinguish between (1) substantive and procedural law, (2) public and private law,
- Describe sources of law
- Explain the principle of stare decisis
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and (3) civil and criminal law
Key Terms Substantive law - The basic law of rights and duties (contract law, criminal law, tort law, law of wills, etc.), as opposed to procedural law (law of pleading, law of evidence, law of jurisdiction, etc.).Procedural law - Rules for enforcing substantive law.Public law - The law dealing with the relationship between government and individuals.Private law - The law involving relationships among individuals and legal entities.Civil law - Laws concerned with civil or private rights and remedies, as contrasted with criminal laws.The system of jurisprudence administered in the Roman empire, particularly as set forth in the compilation of Justinian and his successors, as distinguished from the common law of England and the canon law. The civil law (Civil Code) is followed by Louisiana.Criminal law - The law that involves offenses against the entire community.Common law - Body of law originating in England and derived from judicial decisions. As distinguished from statutory law created by the enactment of legislatures, the common law comprises the judgments and