Cross/Miller's market-leading THE LEGAL ENVIRONMENT OF BUSINESS: TEXT AND CASES, 11E delivers comprehensive, cutting-edge coverage using an interesting, understandable approach. You master vital skills as you study the legal environment within the context of law in today's increasingly regulated business world. Dozens of examples, business-oriented features, and step-by-step analyses place every topic within a meaningful context. You learn how today's legal environment is more about the constraints of business than the simple rules of law with this book's focus on managerial decision-making and current events. This edition makes ethics a priority with a new framework -- the IDDR Approach -- for making ethical decisions. The authors focus less on "black letter law" and more on broader issues that correspond to what business owners and managers face. Updated cases, content, and learning features present the latest developments and skills to succeed in today's legal landscape.
Frank Bernard Cross was the Herbert D. Kelleher Centennial Professor of Business Law at The University of Texas at Austin Law School, where his research centers on judicial decision-making, the economics of law and litigation, and traditional policy and doctrinal issues in administrative law. He has written several books as well as pieces for the Yale Law Journal, Columbia Law Review, University of Chicago Law Review, New York University Law Review, Texas Law Review, Virginia Law Review, Cornell Law Review, Georgetown Law Journal, Northwestern Law Review, and UCLA Law Review. A former president of the Academy of Legal Studies in Business, Professor Cross received his B.A. from the University of Kansas and J.D. from Harvard Law School.
Covers all pressing topics of business law. The book is relatively easy to read considering the topics and offers a lot of interesting real life examples. Unfortunately doesn't deep dive into any of the topics.
Of all the textbooks that I have ever read (and having an A.A., B.A., M.A. already while working on the M.B.A. for this course), I've read a lot of them over the years. This book starts with the assumption that the reader has no knowledge of the law or legal system. Having a background in political science and American history, the beginning was dull to me but serves as a baseline for getting everybody on the same page. As it progresses, it adds to the complexity of legal matters where topics covered in later chapters build upon the foundation set earlier. This does justice to giving students a firm foundation and basis to operate from.
Furthermore, each chapter hits upon important legal concepts that those in business must be aware, while using caselaw summaries and court decisions to accentuate those points. Readers must give themselves a good deal of time to pour through the information, as there is a lot there to digest.
Nevertheless, if all textbooks were written in the fashion that this one was, students just may enjoy school a little more.
I got this book for free walking by the Criminology Department of my school just as they were trying to free up their bookshelves. It retails for around $140. I've read a few chapters and I have to say it's actually pretty interesting. I can't really give an honest assessment to any legal or business professional looking for a textbook on the subject though.