Accounting and finance cannot be taught through the dense text and format typical of legal casebooks. Mirroring textbooks used at business schools with significant quantities of visuals, Essential Concepts of Business for Lawyers uses many graphical elements, including pictures, charts, diagrams, and tables. Engaging hypotheticals are fun and engaging, but they also illustrate the application of important concepts in business situations. At the end of every chapter, there are three forms of review and summary: Essential Terms, Key Concepts, and Review Questions. The text uses many examples, specially set in example boxes, to illustrate and reinforce difficult concepts. Completely up to the minute, the book features material on important, recent events such as the financial crisis of 2008-2009, the collapse of investment banks, the Bernie Madoff fraud case, and Enron. While this book is not a casebook, it includes edited appellate cases at the end of every chapter. These cases provide essential contextualization, illustrating the legal application of the business concepts presented, and make more concrete the lawyer's need to understand business. This makes Essential Concepts of Business for Lawyers unique among available books, as the cases connect the unfamiliar (business concepts) with the familiar (case law). Flexibility makes it stand out as well. It can be easily used as a primary text in an independent course on essential business concepts and is the only single book that adequately serves this function. Additionally, this book can be used as a required or recommended supplement in doctrinal business law courses such as business associations, securities regulations, corporate finance, taxation, banking law, financial regulation, and business planning. Features of Essential Concepts of Business for Lawyers:
Significant use of visuals and graphics.
avoids the dense text and format typical of legal casebooks
mirrors accounting and finance textbooks for business schools, with essential visual aids
pictures
charts
diagrams
tables
Engaging hypotheticals
fun and interesting to consider
illustrate the application of important concepts in business situations
End of chapter reviews summarize the basic points
Essential Terms
Key Concepts
Review Question
typically seen in accounting and finance textbooks used in business schools
Example boxes.
llustrate and reinforce difficult concepts
Highly current materials on recent events
the financial crisis of 2008-2009
the collapse of investment banks
the Bernie Madoff fraud case
Enron
Case applications
include edited appellate cases at the end of every chapter
illustrate the legal application of the business concepts presented