How European is European private international law? : sources, court practice, academic discourse / edited by Jan von Hein, Eva-Maria Kieninger, Giesela Rühl
Tipo de material: TextoDetalles de publicación: Cambridge : Intersentia, 2019 Descripción: 424 pISBN: 9781780686981Tema(s): Derecho internacional PrivadoResumen: Over the course of the last few decades, the European legislature has adopted a total of 18 Regulations in the area of private international law, including civil procedure. The resulting substantial legislative unification has been described as the first true Europeanisation of private international law, and even as a kind of European Choice of Law Revolution. However, it remains largely unclear whether the far-reaching unification of the law on the books has turned private international law into a truly European law in action: To what extent is European private international law actually based on uniform European rules common to all Member States, rather than on state treaties or instruments of enhanced cooperation? Is the manner in which academics and practitioners analyse and interpret European private international law really different from previously existing domestic approaches to private international law? Or, rather, is the actual application and interpretation of European private international law still influenced, or even dominated, by national legal traditions, leading to a re-fragmentation of a supposedly uniform body of law? -- In bringing together academics from all over Europe, How European is European Private International Law? sets out to answer for the first time these crucial and interrelated questions. It sheds light on the conspicuous lack of Europeanness currently symptomatic of European private international law and discusses how this body of law can become truly European in character in the futureTipo de ítem | Biblioteca de origen | Signatura | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras | Reserva de ítems |
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Monografías | 01. BIBLIOTECA CAMPUS JEREZ | IPr-2097 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) | Disponible Ubicación en estantería | Bibliomaps® | 374460331X |
Over the course of the last few decades, the European legislature has adopted a total of 18 Regulations in the area of private international law, including civil procedure. The resulting substantial legislative unification has been described as the first true Europeanisation of private international law, and even as a kind of European Choice of Law Revolution. However, it remains largely unclear whether the far-reaching unification of the law on the books has turned private international law into a truly European law in action: To what extent is European private international law actually based on uniform European rules common to all Member States, rather than on state treaties or instruments of enhanced cooperation? Is the manner in which academics and practitioners analyse and interpret European private international law really different from previously existing domestic approaches to private international law? Or, rather, is the actual application and interpretation of European private international law still influenced, or even dominated, by national legal traditions, leading to a re-fragmentation of a supposedly uniform body of law? -- In bringing together academics from all over Europe, How European is European Private International Law? sets out to answer for the first time these crucial and interrelated questions. It sheds light on the conspicuous lack of Europeanness currently symptomatic of European private international law and discusses how this body of law can become truly European in character in the future
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