代写MLC101 – Business Law
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代写MLC101 – Business Law
MLC101 – Business Law
Assignment one– Written Assignment
DUE DATE AND TIME: Week 6, 12/12/2016, on or before 11:59PM
PERCENTAGE OF FINAL GRADE: 20%
HURDLE DETAILS: None
Learning Outcome Details
Unit Learning Outcome (ULO) Graduate Learning Outcome
(GLO)
ULO 1: Explain and apply the fundamental principles of the
law governing business in Australia (law of contract,
consumer protection, legal entities such as agency,
partnerships and corporations law and negligent
misstatements/product liability) in order to solve business
law problems.
GLO1: Discipline-specific
knowledge and
capabilities
GLO5: Problem solving
ULO 2: Critically evaluate the fundamental principles
underlying the legal concepts governing businesses in
Australia.
GLO4: Critical thinking
ULO 3: Use scholarly sources to critically examine concepts
relating to Business
Law in an international context.
GLO3: Digital literacy
GLO8: Global citizenship
Assessment Feedback:
Students who submit their work by the due date will receive their marks and feedback on
CloudDeakin on 17/01/2017, 5:30PM
Description / Requirements
Assessment: Research Paper is worth 20% of the final mark.
Word Count: 1500 words excluding
citations, quotations, footnotes and bibliography (10% leeway).
Written Assignment Question:
World economies are ranked based on their ease of doing business. According to the World Bank’s
2017 Report on Ease of Doing Business (Doing Business, World Bank, 2017), Australia is ranked 15th
代写MLC101 – Business Law
out of 190 countries surveyed. When it comes to the ease of enforcing contracts it stands third out
of 190 countries. According to the report, among others, a “high ease of doing business ranking
means the regulatory environment is more conducive to the starting and operation of a local firm.”
One of the key criteria in this ranking is enforcing contracts.
The research has two parts. First, find the report and go through indicators applicable to
enforcement of contracts. After highlighting the five key indicators for enforcing contracts [These
are: 1)Court structure and proceeding; 2)Case management; 3)Court automation; 4)Alternative
dispute resolution; 5) Quality of judicial processes], discuss the benefit of these indicators for doing
business, critically analyze and reflect upon two of these indicators with particular focus on how
these indicators impact small and medium enterprises by citing examples. (1200 words). In the
second part of your research, describe your research process, problems you encountered in your
research and how you resolved these problems (300 words).
This is a legal system related question and it does not require you to read contract topics. Please
confine yourself to the report and issues arising from the report. The relevant website for locating
the report is http://www.doingbusiness.org/data/exploretopics/enforcing-contracts Please confine
yourselves to enforcing contract indicators only.
Submission Instructions
Submission must be received on CloudDeakin on or before 11.59 pm on Monday, 12 December
2016. For more information, please refer to the information posted on CloudDeakin.
The Assignment Drop Box (Written Assignment) will remain open for additional five days for those
who submit late subject to penalty. See newly adopted Faculty penalty rules below. Please
disregard penalty related information on unit guide as this information is superseded by a newer
rule adopted recently.
Emailed or faxed submissions WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED for any reason other than due to a
CloudDeakin failure (the Unit Team can verify this from CloudDeakin). You must submit your
assignment to the Assignment Dropbox T3 2016 MLC101 Assessment 1 folder.
You must reference your written assignment in accordance with the Deakin Harvard Referencing
Guide. Specifically, please refer to the ‘Legal sources’ referencing section within the Deakin
Harvard Referencing Guide: http://www.deakin.edu.au/students/studying/study-
support/referencing/harvard or click here for Harvard style of referencing
Please refer to the Marking Rubric to ensure you follow the guidelines carefully to avoid losing
marks for unnecessary mistakes and omissions.
You must keep a backup copy of every assignment you submit, until the marked assignment has
been returned to you. In the unlikely event that one of your assignments is misplaced, you will
need to submit your backup copy.
Any work you submit may be checked by electronic or other means for the purposes of detecting
collusion and/or plagiarism.
When you are required to submit an assignment through your CloudDeakin unit site, you will
receive an email to your Deakin email address confirming that it has been submitted. You should
check that you can see your assignment in the Submissions view of the Assignment dropbox folder
after upload, and check for, and keep, the email receipt for the submission.
Additional Notes
Penalties for late submission: The following marking penalties will apply if you submit an
assessment task after the due date without an approved extension: 5% will be deducted
from available marks for each day up to five days, and work that is submitted more than five
days after the due date will not be marked. You will receive 0% for the task. 'Day' means
working day for paper submissions and calendar day for electronic submissions. The Unit
Chair may refuse to accept a late submission where it is unreasonable or impracticable to
assess the task after the due date.
For more information about academic misconduct, special consideration, extensions, and
assessment feedback, please refer to the document Your rights and responsibilities as a
student in this Unit in the first folder next to the Unit Guide of the Resources area in the
CloudDeakin unit site.
Building evidence of your experiences, skills and knowledge (Portfolio) - Building a
portfolio that evidences your skills, knowledge and experience will provide you with a
valuable tool to help you prepare for interviews and to showcase to potential employers.
There are a number of tools that you can use to build a portfolio. You are provided with
cloud space through OneDrive, or through the Portfolio tool in the Cloud Unit Site, but you
can use any storage repository system that you like. Remember that a Portfolio is YOUR
tool. You should be able to store your assessment work, reflections, achievements and
artefacts in YOUR Portfolio. Once you have completed this assessment piece, add it to your
personal Portfolio to use and showcase your learning later, when applying for jobs, or
further studies. Curate your work by adding meaningful tags to your artefacts that describe
what the artefact represents.
代写MLC101 – Business Law