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Given the unprecedented recent turmoil on financial markets we now
face radically challenged, 'post-Lehmann' assumptions on protecting
the vulnerable in financial transactions. This collection of essays
explores conceptions of, and responses to, unconscionability and
similar notions across Europe with specific reference to financial
transactions. It presents a detailed analysis of concepts of
unconscionability in Europe against a backdrop of Commission
initiatives aimed, variously, at securing a single market in
financial services, producing greater coherence in EC consumer
protection law and consolidating European private law. This
analysis illustrates, for example, that concepts of
unconscionability depend on context and can be shaped by a variety
of factors. It also illustrates that jurisdictions may choose to
respond to questions of unconscionability through a variety of
legal instruments located in different branches of the law rather
than through a single doctrine. Thus this collection illuminates
many of the obstacles facing harmonisation in this area.
Produced under the auspices of an EU-funded Marie Curie research
programme, this volume analyses vulnerability in European private
law and scrutinises consumer protection in credit and investments
in the context of the recent turmoil in financial markets and EU
harmonisation initiatives in the area. It explores key issues such
as responsible lending, the disclosure of information, consumer
confidence, the regulation of consumer investment services and the
protection of bank depositors. The chapters emanate from the
'Consumer Protection in Europe: Theory and Practice' duo colloquium
which explored consumer protection in Europe in its theoretical and
practical dimensions. These topics are even more relevant today
given the passage of the Consumer Rights Directive, the appointment
of an Expert Group on a common frame of reference, the Green Paper
on European Contract Law and the ongoing deliberations surrounding
the Common European Sales Law.
This volume analyses the theory and practice of European consumer
protection in the context of consolidation initiatives seen, inter
alia, in the revision of the Consumer Acquis, the Draft Common
Frame of Reference and the proposal for an EU Consumer Rights
Directive. The issues addressed are all the more significant given
the revisions to the proposed Directive, the appointment of an
'Expert Group on a Common Frame of Reference' and the Commission's
2010 Green Paper on progress towards a European Contract Law. The
contributions to this volume point to the arrival of a contested
moment in EU consumer protection, questioning the arrival of the
'empowered' consumer and uncovering the fault lines between
consumer protection and other goals. What emerges is a model of
poly-contextual EU consumer protection law, a model that challenges
the assumptions in both the 2010 Green Paper and the revised
proposed Consumer Rights Directive.
This book emanates from a duo-colloquium which explored the
Europeanisation of private law in the context of efforts to
consolidate the consumer acquis, the Draft Common Frame of
Reference, the appointment of an Expert Group on a Common Frame of
Reference in the area of European contract law, the passage of the
Consumer Rights Directive and the proposed Common European Sales
Law. This book, with fully updated contributions, critically
reflects on whether the process of Europeanisation, which has
shaped private law in the EU Member States, has now reached a
significant turning point in its development, a point of punctuated
equilibrium. Written by a team of leading authors, the topics
covered will be of concern in all European legal systems and
beyond.
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