Before you charge in - part 5. When and how to challenge public procurement contracts
19.05.10
When you bid for a public contract, what can you do if the rules have been breached? Who is able to bring a challenge and when? What remedies are available?
In this the fifth part of our 'before you charge in' series, we set out an overview of public procurement challenges and the available remedies.
Related alerts
- Before you charge in - part 1. Commercial agents - the essentials and what happens upon termination
- Before you charge in - part 2. Governing law and jurisdiction - how to save yourself a headache at the outset
- Before you charge in - part 3. Entire agreement clauses - how effective are they?
- Before you charge in - part 4. Limitation - is the clock ticking?
- Before you charge in - part 5. When and how to challenge public procurement contracts
- Before you charge in - part 6. Dispute resolution clauses – one size does not fit all
- Before you charge in - part 7. Confidentiality agreements - are they worth the paper they are written on?
- Before you charge in - part 8. Say what you really mean: the importance of making your intentions clear in commercial contracts
- Before you charge in - Part 9. At the heart of it: repudiatory breaches and termination
- Before you charge in - Part 10. A bird in the hand...when does the right to set-off arise?
- Before you charge in - Part 11. Staying in control of your contracts: no-waiver and variation clauses
Key Contact
Andrew Smith, partner, +44 (0)121 685 2742, andrew_smith@wragge.com
This alert may contain information of general interest about current legal issues, but does not give legal advice.

