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In its case law the Court of Justice of the European Union has
acknowledged general principles of EU law, which have a
constitutional status. In addition the Court of Justice has also
recognised 'general principles of civil law', relying upon values
which are traditionally rooted in the domain of private law.The
pervasive use of principles, both in the case law of the Court of
Justice and in other EU projects of 'soft' and 'hard' law,
challenges legal scholarship. Although the concepts of principles
and rules have been widely discussed within the context of national
legal orders, they need to be rethought at the European level,
because the traditional view of a principle does not fit the
European Union's constitutional architecture. This also applies to
the general principles of civil law, for instance good faith. They
also have to be redefined to be consistent with the European
Union's legal order.The contributions in this book examine EU
general principles and their distinction from rules both within the
context of the European Union as well as of the Member States.
Moreover, they focus on the relevance of EU general principles for
contract law and of principles of civil law for a European contract
law.
The European Banking Union, with its own EU supervisory
institutions such as the ECB, has had us forget that banking law
mainly consists of transactions with and between clients. It is to
a large extent (European) contract law. This volume investigates
how the post-crisis supervisory regime of the EU and the Eurozone
impacts on bank managers' duties and on market transactions: in
their relationship to the large range of stakeholders, including
the public as such, in current lending and investment transactions,
in the phase of recovery and resolution (with bail-ins triggering
changes of contractual rights), but also in adjudication, namely in
banking related ADR schemes. It concludes with a look at the
ongoing endeavour to extend the banking union to a capital market
and more generally a financial union.
The Chinese Civil Code (2020) is the first ever Civil Code in
mainland China since 1949. In addition to the consolidation of
existing civil legislations, the Code incorporated a number of
doctrinal and structural changes that are significant both in and
beyond China. The chapters in this volume demonstrate the extent of
European influence in Chinese Civil Law and also shows how Chinese
law innovates upon those influences. The book shares the insights
from both the key Chinese scholars who were directly involved in
the drafting process and veteran Western scholars who study Chinese
private law.
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