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The Applicable Law to International Commercial Contracts and the Status of Lex Mercatoria - With a Special Emphasis on Choice of Law Rules in the Euro (Paperback)
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The Applicable Law to International Commercial Contracts and the Status of Lex Mercatoria - With a Special Emphasis on Choice of Law Rules in the Euro (Paperback)
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International commercial contracts in the context of increasing
globalization of the national markets have posed some of the most
difficult questions of the legal theory as developed since the
emergence of nation states; those are, whether it is possible or
desirable to allow international commercial contracts to be
governed by the law merchant or, in its medieval name, lex
mercatoria, a body of rules which has not been derived from the
will of sovereign states, but mainly from transnational trade
usages and practices, and to what extent those rules should govern
transnational transactions. The traditional approach of legal
positivism to the questions maintains that law governing contracts
containing a foreign element should be a national law which will be
determined according to choice of law rules. However, the
particularities of cross border trade yield unsatisfactory results
when the rules essentially designed for the settlement of domestic
disputes or national laws pertaining to international economic
relations, but developed under the influence of a certain legal
tradition, are tried to be applied. New solutions are needed to
overcome the special problems of international trade between
merchants from different legal systems. In that regard, while the
international commercial arbitration which has been freed from the
constraints of the domestic laws is an important step, the courts
generally applying the principle of party autonomy which allows
parties to designate the law that will apply to their transactions
have proved insufficient due to the positivistic influence on the
conflict of laws rules of most countries which has limited parties'
choice of law to the national substantive laws. The problems
created by those inconsistencies and divergences have been felt
more strongly in the European Community which constitutes an
internal market by integrating the national markets of Member
States into a single one. The present paper is an attempt to search
for answers to those questions with a special emphasis on the
situation in the European Community on the basis of the idea that
law as a servant of social need must take account of the far
reaching and dramatic socio-economic changes.
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