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Property Law Conference 2008 - Looking to the futurePublication Date: 16-Jun-2008Author(s): Stuart Walker, John Harkness, Mark Henaghan, Helen Melrose, Robert Muir, John Greenwood, Duncan Webb, Murray Gilbert, Anne Wilson, Pedro Morgan, Andrew Petersen, Jim Guest, Jacqui Sibbald, Philip Blank, Anna Buchly, John Clark, David Chisnall, Dave Kelly, Tomas Kennedy-Grant KC, John Meads, Phillip Merfield, Graeme Olding, Stuart Robertson, Phil Shannon, Willy Sussman, Vaughan Underwood, Sam Wimsett, Jonathan Flaws |
NZ $110.00 | ||
Statutory InterpretationPublication Date: 03-Apr-2001Author(s): John Fogarty KC, John Burrows |
NZ $37.50 |
Author(s): Malcolm Maclean, Ken Patterson
Published: 23 July, 2001
Pages: 114
Introduction
The purpose of this seminar is to assist the property lawyer to add value to your clients' subdivision and development projects. With increasing deregulation of the legal and other professions, and the emergence of multi-disciplinary practices, there is both increasing opportunity and need for you to be proactive in adding value to your clients' activities. Subdivision and development obviously require all three of the "land, labour and capital" inputs into which classical economics divides the resources involved in human activity. With the labour component comprising all the human input into an activity (physical, mental and technological), we proceed from the starting points that:
This is not to suggest you should become either the developer in the place of your client, or the project manager - unless the client wants such a role assumption and you are sufficiently experienced to do so. However, it does mean you can play a central and strategic role in the subdivision and development processes, achieving a more profitable and cost-effective project than would be the case if you did only the legal work when instructed to do so.
Content outline