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This book analyses, comments and further develops on the most
important instrument of the Hague Conference on Private
International Law (HCCH): the HCCH 2019 Judgments Convention. The
HCCH Convention, the product of decades of work, will have a
transformative effect on global judicial cooperation in civil
matters. This book explores its 'mechanics', i.e. the legal
cornerstones of the new Convention (Part I), its prospects in
leading regions of the world (Part II), and offers an overview and
comment on its outlook (Part III). Drawing on contributions from
world-leading experts, this magisterial and ambitious work will
become the reference work for law-makers, lawyers and scholars in
the field of private international law.
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Rome I and Rome II in Practice (Hardcover)
Emmanuel Guinchard; Contributions by Emmanuel Guinchard, Thomas Kadner Graziano, Michel Jose Reymond, Stephan Walter, …
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R4,409
Discovery Miles 44 090
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This book is devoted to the applicable law to contractual and
non-contractual obligations in the European Union. The Rome I and
II Regulations provide uniform conflict-of-laws rules in order to
avoid undue forum-shopping. In theory, all national courts of EU
Member States (excluding Denmark) apply the same rules determining
the applicable law. Rome I and Rome II in Practice examines whether
the theory has been put into practice and assesses the difficulties
that may have arisen in the interpretation and application of these
Regulations. Such a study appears invaluable as the Rome I and II
Regulations may be seen as a critical stepping stone towards the
construction of a true and far-reaching European Private
International Law. Providing clear and detailed insights into the
national case law of most EU Member States, as well as the case law
of the Court of Justice of the European Union, and followed by a
comparative analysis, this book is a valuable resource for
practitioners, the judiciary and academics who are interested in
understanding how EU law is applied on national and European
levels.
This volume reveals the potential effects of interdisciplinary
cooperation between the areas of provenance research and art and
cultural property law. The art historical articles deal with
subjects such as cultural assets from colonial contexts, art looted
by the Nazis, and the confiscation of cultural assets in the Soviet
occupation zone and in the GDR, as well as questions of
methodology. The legal articles address the fundamental questions
of legal protection of art and cultural assets, for example the
implications in terms of civil law of the new Art and Cultural
Property Law.
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