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This book addresses the pressing challenges presented by the
proliferation of international surrogacy arrangements. The book is
divided into three parts. Part 1 contains National Reports on
domestic approaches to surrogacy from Argentina, Australia,
Belgium, Brazil, China, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Greece,
Guatemala, Hungary, India, Ireland, Israel, Mexico, Netherlands,
New Zealand, Russia, South Africa, Spain, Ukraine, United Kingdom,
United States and Venezuela. The reports are written by domestic
specialists, each demonstrating the difficult and urgent problems
arising in many States as a result of international surrogacy
arrangements. These National Reports not only provide the backdrop
to the authors' proposed model regulation appearing in Part 3, but
serve as a key resource for scrutinising the most worrying
incompatibilities in national laws on surrogacy. Part 2 of the book
contains two contributions that provide international perspectives
on cross-border surrogacy such as the 'human rights' perspective.
Part 3 contains a General Report, which consists of an analysis of
the National Reports appearing in Part 1, together with a proposed
model of regulation of international surrogacy arrangements at the
international level written by the two co-editors, Paul Beaumont
and Katarina Trimmings. The research undertaken by Katarina
Trimmings and Paul Beaumont from 2010 to 2012 was funded by the
Nuffield Foundation.
This book focuses on the protection of abducting mothers who have
been subject to return proceedings under the 1980 Hague Abduction
Convention and the Brussels IIa Regulation, in circumstances where
the child abduction has been motivated by acts of domestic violence
from the left-behind father. The utility of Regulation 606/2013 on
mutual recognition of protection measures in civil matters and
Directive 2011/99/EU on the European Protection Order, and how
protection measures can be used to protect abducting mothers, are
examined within this context. Both instruments allow cross-border
circulation of protection measures but, so far, have not attracted
much attention in practice. This book aims to fill that gap.
Domestic Violence and Parental Child Abduction is the culmination
of the POAM (Protection of Abducting Mothers in Return Proceedings)
project, a collaborative research project conducted between 2019
and 2021. It presents and analyses the findings of the project and
brings together contributions by the project partners, as well as
by other renowned experts. The book also presents a Best Practice
Guide developed for the application of Regulation 606/2013 and
Directive 2011/99/EU in child abduction cases committed against the
background of domestic violence. The book offers a unique
perspective on the problem of international parental child
abductions committed against the background of domestic violence.
Given its practical focus, it will appeal not only to an academic
audience but also to judges, legal practitioners and other
professionals working in the area of parental child abduction.
The first part of the book critically evaluates the evolution of
the separate intra-EU child abduction regime and examines the
extent to which the European Union complied with its standards of
good legislative drafting during the negotiations on the Brussels
II bis Regulation. It seeks to demonstrate that there was no real
legal need for the involvement of the European Union in the area of
child abduction and for the tightening of the 1980 Hague Abduction
Convention return mechanism. The second part of the book presents
findings of a statistical survey into the operation of child
abduction provisions of the Brussels II bis Regulation in the first
year of the functioning of the instrument and reveals how
effectively the intra-EU return mechanism operated in that year.
Based on the findings of the statistical survey, the book
identifies and discusses a number of points of concern in respect
of the functioning of the new child abduction scheme. Finally, the
book investigates whether the Brussels II bis Regulation has added
any value in the area of child abduction.
The new edition of this well-established and highly regarded work
has been fully updated to encompass the major changes and
developments in the law, including coverage of the Recast Brussels
I Regulation which came into force in 2015. The book is invaluable
for the practitioner as well as being one of the leading students'
textbooks in the field, giving comprehensive and accessible
coverage of the basic principles of private international law. It
offers students, teachers and practitioners not only a rigorous
academic examination of the subject, but also a practical guide to
the complex subject of private international law. Written by an
expert team of academics, there is extensive coverage of commercial
topics such as the jurisdiction of various courts and their
limitations, stays of proceedings and restraining foreign
proceedings, the recognition and enforcement of judgments, the law
of obligations with respect to contractual and non-contractual
obligations. There are also sections on the various aspects of
family law in private international law, and the law of property,
including the transfer of property, administration of estates,
succession and trusts.
This substantial and original book examines how the EU Private
International Law (PIL) framework is functioning and considers its
impact on the administration of justice in cross-border cases
within the EU. It grew out of a major project (ie EUPILLAR:
European Union Private International Law: Legal Application in
Reality) financially supported by the EU Civil Justice Programme.
The research was led by the Centre for Private International Law at
the University of Aberdeen and involved partners from the
Universities of Freiburg, Antwerp, Wroclaw, Leeds, Milan and Madrid
(Complutense). The contributors address the specific features of
cross-border disputes in the EU by undertaking a comprehensive
analysis of the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU) and national case
law on the Brussels I, Rome I and II, Brussels IIa and Maintenance
Regulations. Part I discusses the development of the EU PIL
framework. Part II contains the national reports from 26 EU Member
States. Parts III (civil and commercial) and IV (family law)
contain the CJEU case law analysis and several cross-cutting
chapters. Part V briefly sets the agenda for an institutional
reform which is necessary to improve the effectiveness of the EU
PIL regime. This comprehensive research project book will be of
interest to researchers, students, legal practitioners, judges and
policy-makers who work, or are interested, in the field of private
international law.
This book, compiled in honour of the work and life of Professor
Jonathan Fitchen, brings together preeminent scholars from across
the private international law world. The chapters address a variety
of conceptual and substantive problems in private international
law, providing discerning consideration of contemporary
developments in the discipline, from conceptual analyses of the
evolving nature and scope of private international law to
substantive problems across a range of longstanding and emerging
issues. The contributions provide substantial new insights into our
understanding of the nature of private international law. Taken
together, the book addresses subject matters across the spectrum of
private international law problems, including issues on which there
is insufficient scholarly analysis. This includes consideration of
contemporary problems of great political importance, such as
migration, environmental protection, gender-based discrimination,
and the proper delineation of public and private intervention. In
addition, emerging problems in commercial law, such as
cryptocurrencies, are explored in the book, as are longstanding
definitional concerns in family law. Broader emerging systemic
concerns, such as the treatment of foreign judgments in major
economies such as China and the post-Brexit evolution of private
international law, are also addressed. The book is a valuable
source for the judiciary, legal practitioners, policy makers, and
scholars of private international law.
The new edition of this well-established and highly regarded work
has been fully updated to encompass the major changes and
developments in the law, including coverage of the Recast Brussels
I Regulation which came into force in 2015. The book is invaluable
for the practitioner as well as being one of the leading students'
textbooks in the field, giving comprehensive and accessible
coverage of the basic principles of private international law. It
offers students, teachers and practitioners not only a rigorous
academic examination of the subject, but also a practical guide to
the complex subject of private international law. Written by an
expert team of academics, there is extensive coverage of commercial
topics such as the jurisdiction of various courts and their
limitations, stays of proceedings and restraining foreign
proceedings, the recognition and enforcement of judgments, the law
of obligations with respect to contractual and non-contractual
obligations. There are also sections on the various aspects of
family law in private international law, and the law of property,
including the transfer of property, administration of estates,
succession and trusts.
This substantial and original book examines how the EU Private
International Law (PIL) framework is functioning and considers its
impact on the administration of justice in cross-border cases
within the EU. It grew out of a major project (ie EUPILLAR:
European Union Private International Law: Legal Application in
Reality) financially supported by the EU Civil Justice Programme.
The research was led by the Centre for Private International Law at
the University of Aberdeen and involved partners from the
Universities of Freiburg, Antwerp, Wroclaw, Leeds, Milan and Madrid
(Complutense). The contributors address the specific features of
cross-border disputes in the EU by undertaking a comprehensive
analysis of the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU) and national case
law on the Brussels I, Rome I and II, Brussels IIa and Maintenance
Regulations. Part I discusses the development of the EU PIL
framework. Part II contains the national reports from 26 EU Member
States. Parts III (civil and commercial) and IV (family law)
contain the CJEU case law analysis and several cross-cutting
chapters. Part V briefly sets the agenda for an institutional
reform which is necessary to improve the effectiveness of the EU
PIL regime. This comprehensive research project book will be of
interest to researchers, students, legal practitioners, judges and
policy-makers who work, or are interested, in the field of private
international law.
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