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A range of international and European Union legal instruments exert
influence on the national civil procedure rules of European Union
member states. Some specifically aim for the harmonisation of
national procedural law across Europe, while others primarily focus
on facilitating cross-border litigation, enforcing rights or
setting minimum standards. However, often the same time instruments
cause fragmentation, reduce coherence and challenge prevailing
concepts and doctrines of national civil procedure law.With a view
to carefully selected North Western jurisdiction (EU and EEA member
states) this book explores how EU, EEA, and international
legislation, judicial activism on EU and national level, and new
soft law instruments affect national civil procedure law and how,
in turn, national rules may impact the development of international
instruments. How are the respective countries affected by a
particular (EU) regulation? Has the regulation generated changes of
the national law? Are European rules, or national rules following
from them, applied in court practice? Are there differences in the
approach towards implementation and application of EU law, and if
so why and with what consequences? Do international influences
serve as an impetus for national reforms, or are they implemented
mechanically? Do hard law approaches produce more harmonisation or
convergence than soft law approaches?
Funding of justice has significant consequences for the enforcement
of rights and impacts directly on access to justice and the right
to a fair trial as constitutional rights. Access to justice in turn
essentially impacts on the effective enjoyment of any other
constitutional right, since having the actual means to access a
court in case of a potential breach strengthens that right. Public
funding, such as legal aid, has come under pressure due to the
reality of financial austerity measures and the tightening public
budgets in many countries. This has contributed to privatization
and marketisation of funding in ever more jurisdictions. Private
forms of funding include inter alia litigation insurance,
third-party litigation finance and crowdfunding, as well as
different forms of assigning or selling claims. As public funding
is in decline and as market liberalization in the field of justice
increases, crucial questions related to the rule of law, access to
justice and social and economic development, in the intersection
between states, citizens and business are raised. For example,
potential questions of conflict of interest and how to ensure a
basic level of equality of access to funding, whilst at the same
time protecting market freedom. Some of the contributions in the
volume deal with the consequences of privatization of funding of
justice on access to justice from a general, principled and
theoretical perspective. Other contributions deal with specific
regulatory developments or issues at the EU level, alternatively at
the local level in specific jurisdictions. Further contributions
deal with crucial issues of funding of justice in environmental
matters, that are increasingly relevant and topical in practice.
The regulation of cross border civil and commercial litigation is a
burgeoning EU policy area. Legislative measures and other
initiatives now provide a framework for the regulation of
cross-border service of documents, obtaining evidence, establishing
jurisdiction and enforcement of judgments, enforcement orders,
legal aid, alternative dispute resolution, payment orders, and
small claims. In addition, overarching measures have been enacted
including the creation a judicial network and judicial training
structures.
This book offers the first detailed analysis of the EU's activity
in procedural harmonization, spanning civil procedure, private
international law and European law. The book situates the
development of the policy area and its regulation in relation to
broader themes of the European integration process: market
building, citizenship, fundamental rights, subsidiarity and
governance. It provides a detailed analysis of the legislative
measures and assesses their impact on fundamental principles of
civil justice, including due process rights. The case-law in the
area is also analyzed, including the introduction of the principle
of mutual recognition. The book concludes with a comparative
analysis of the EU's approach with broader international efforts
for procedural harmonization.
This seventh volume in the Swedish Studies in European Law series
brings together some of the most prominent scholars working within
the fast-evolving field of EU civil justice. Civil justice has an
impact on matters involving, inter alia, family relationships,
consumers, entrepreneurs, employees, small and medium-sized
businesses and large multinational corporations. It therefore has
great power and potential. Over the past 15 years a wealth of EU
measures have been enacted in this field. Issues arising from the
implementation thereof and practice in relation to these measures
are now emerging. Hence, this volume will explore the benefits as
well as the challenges of these measures. The particular themes
covered include forum shopping, alternative dispute resolution,
simplified procedures and debt collection, family matters and
collective redress. In addition, the deepening of the field that
continues post-Lisbon has occasioned a new level of regulatory and
policy challenges. These are discussed in the final part of the
volume which focuses on mutual recognition also in the broader
European law context of integration in the Area of Freedom,
Security and Justice.
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