
Boundaries of European Private International Law : Les frontières du droit international privé européen / Las fronteras del derecho internacional privado europeo.
Title:
Boundaries of European Private International Law : Les frontières du droit international privé européen / Las fronteras del derecho internacional privado europeo.
Author:
Bergé, Jean-Sylvestre.
ISBN:
9782802751649
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (1090 pages)
Contents:
Couverture -- Titre -- Copyright -- FOREWORD / AVANT-PROPOS / PRÓLOGO -- COORDINATORS / COORDINATEURS / COORDINADORES -- CONTRIBUTORS / CONTRIBUTEURS / HAN CONTRIBUIDO -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS / REMERCIEMENTS / AGRADECIMIENTOS -- INTRODUCTION / INTRODUCTION / INTRODUCCIÓN -- INTRODUCTION - OPEN QUESTIONS CONCERNING THE BOUNDARIES OF EUROPEAN PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW -- INTRODUCTION - QUESTIONS OUVERTES AUTOUR DES FRONTIÈRES DU DROIT INTERNATIONAL PRIVÉ EUROPÉEN -- INTRODUCCIÓN - PREGUNTAS ABIERTAS EN TORNO A LAS FRONTERAS DEL DERECHO INTERNACIONAL PRIVADO EUROPEO -- FIRST PART / PREMIÈRE PARTIE / PRIMERA PARTE - European Private International Law and National and International Law Droit international privé européen et droit national et international Derecho internacional privado europeo y derecho nacional e internacional -- INTRODUCTION TO THE FIRST PART - EUROPEAN PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW AND NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL LAW -- INTRODUCTION DE LA PREMIÈRE PARTIE - DROIT INTERNATIONAL PRIVÉ EUROPÉEN ET DROIT NATIONAL ET INTERNATIONAL -- INTRODUCCIÓN A LA PRIMERA PARTE - DERECHO INTERNACIONAL PRIVADO EUROPEO Y DERECHO NACIONAL E INTERNACIONAL -- Titre 1 - Introductory Contributions Contributions liminaires Contribuciones introductorias -- CHAPTER 1 - THE EU REGULATION ON SUCCESSION MATTERS AND THE TERRITORIAL CONFLICTS OF LAWS WITHIN THE EUROPEAN BOUNDARIES -- I. - Presentation -- II. - How the EU solved territorial conflicts of laws,until the EU's Regulation on Succession -- III. - The solution established in the EU's Regulation on Succession -- IV. - The possible problems caused by Art. 36 of the EU's Regulation on Succession within the EU -- A. - Testate or intestate succession -- 1. - The deceased is a Spanish citizen -- 2. - The deceased is a European citizen -- B. - Agreements as to succession.
1. - Agreement as to succession regarding the succession of one person -- 2. - Agreement as to succession regarding the succession of several persons -- V. - Conclusion -- CHAPTER 2 - ENFORCEMENT OF FOREIGN MEDIATION AGREEMENTS WITHIN THE EUROPEAN UNION -- Introduction -- I. - The enforceability of agreements resulting from mediation as the principle of departure -- II. - The enforcement of mediation settlements -- III. - The cross-border enforcement of settlements -- IV. - Assessment -- CAPÍTULO 3 - TRIBUNAL UNIFICADO DE PATENTES : COMPETENCIA JUDICIAL Y RECONOCIMIENTO DE RESOLUCIONES (UNIFIED PATENT COURT : INTERNATIONAL JURISDICTION AND RECOGNITION OF JUDGEMENTS) -- Introducción -- I. - Tribunal unificado de patentes : competencia por razón de la materia, reparto interno de procedimientos y competencia judicial internacional -- II. - Contenido del Reglamento (UE) no 542/2014 que modifica el Reglamento Bruselas I bis -- III. - La competencia judicial internacional tras el Reglamento (UE) nº 542/2014 -- A. - Extensión de las reglas de competencia a los demandados no domiciliados en un Estado miembro -- B. - La regla sobre competencia subsidiaria en la Propuesta de Reglamento -- C. - El nuevo artículo 71 ter apartado 3 del Reglamento Bruselas I bis -- D. - Valoración crítica de la competencia basada en la presencia de bienes del demandado -- IV. - Reconocimiento y ejecución de resoluciones -- A. - Alcance del Reglamento (UE) no 542/2014 -- 1. - Motivos de denegación del reconocimiento -- B. - Medidas de ejecución -- Conclusión -- Titre 2 - Young Researchers Contributions Contributions des jeunes chercheurs Contribuciones de los jóvenes investigadores -- CHAPTER 1 - AGENCY AND DISTRIBUTION CONTRACTS: NATIONAL RULES V. EUROPEAN PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW -- I. - Disparity between european and national perceptions of weaker parties to a contract.
II. - The grey area of collaboration contracts -- A. - Spanish protective private international law rules -- B. - Belgian protective private international law rules -- III. - Prevalence of these rules over EPIL -- A. - International Jurisdiction provisions -- 1. - The facts of the case and the preliminary question -- 2. - The decision of the ECJ and its implications -- B. - Conflict-of-law provisions -- 1. - Facts of the case and preliminary question -- 2. - How to detect an overriding mandatory provision: the question of public interest -- 3. - The decision of the Court -- 4. - Implications of the decision -- IV. - Conclusions -- CHAPTER 2 - RECONCILING MANDATORY NORMS AND EUROPEAN UNION PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW IN CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS -- I. - Absence of control over the overriding nature of a national norm -- A. - A missed opportunity to clarify the overriding qualification criteria -- B. - Incoherencies created by an absence of strict control -- II. - Need of control over the overriding mandatory rules -- A. - Influence of the mandatory rules mechanism -- B. - Influence of the system of recognition and enforcement of decisions -- Conclusion -- CHAPTER 3 - THE EUROPEAN LEGAL FRAMEWORK ON CONSUMER ONLINE DISPUTE RESOLUTION (ODR) -- I. - Towards a contextual framework of consumer ODR -- A. - The lack of appropriate means of consumer redress -- B. - Technologies for an informal justice -- C. - Consumers' access to justice in the EU -- II. - A EU law approach towards consumer ADR/ODR -- A. - The EU secondary legislation on consumer ADR/ODR -- B. - Mediation in civil and commercial aspects versus consumer mediation -- III. - The Directive 2013/11/EU on consumer ADR -- A. - Its aim and scope of application -- B. - ADR entities and Competent authorities -- C. - Regulatory principles -- D. - Information, assistance and cooperation.
IV. - An ODR platform for consumer disputes -- A. - Its aim and scope of application -- B. - Functions of the ODR platform -- C. - Network of ODR contact points -- D. - Submission and resolution of the complaints -- V. - Conclusions -- CHAPTER 4 - EUROPEAN ACCOUNT PRESERVATION ORDER: WHAT DOES THE COMMON LAW TRADITION HAVE TO SAY? -- I. - Place of the Regulation in the national,international, and european legal order -- II. - Available options for the EAPO -- III. - Common law characteristics missing from the EAPO Regulation -- CHAPTER 5 - CROSS BORDER CREDITOR'S PROTECTION: THE IMPACT OF THE EUROPEAN ACCOUNT PRESERVATION ORDER -- Introduction -- I. - Transparency of debtor's bank accounts -- II. - The debtor's domicile -- III. - Abolition of exequatur -- IV. - Impact on the fundamental rights of the debtor -- Conclusion -- CHAPTER 6 - JUDICIAL POWERS OVER PENALTY CLAUSES AND PROCEEDINGS FOLLOWED BEFORE AN ENGLISH COURT -- I. - Introduction: Remedies and the lex fori -- A. - English PIL and RIR -- B. - Lex fori regit processum and RIR -- II. - A workable hypothetical case -- III. - The caveat of the limits of the powers conferred on the court by its procedural law -- A. - The deliberations on the caveat -- B. - From the general to the specific: lack of consensus -- C. - Limits identified: rationale and consequence? -- D. - French judicial powers alien to forum's traditions and practices as a "limit"? -- CHAPTER 7 - DISCRIMINATION AGAINST THIRD STATE RESPONDENTS IN REGULATION (EC) NO. 2201/2003 -- Introduction -- I. - Brussels IIa rules: going beyond the boundaries of the FSJA -- A. - The schizophrenic scope of Brussels IIa -- B. - The preservation of national sovereignty and exorbitant grounds of jurisdiction -- II. - The categorization of respondents:a eurocentric ternary distinction.
A. - EU respondents: the insular approach to exorbitant grounds of jurisdiction -- B. - Third-State respondents: the category fully exposed to exorbitant jurisdiction -- III. - Reconciling EUPIL with PIL applicable to third-state respondents -- A. - The reconciliation: extension of jurisdiction rules to third-State respondents -- B. - EUPIL in family matters: a uniform regulation of jurisdiction in relation to third States -- Conclusion -- CHAPTER 8 - MOVING BACK AND FORTH: ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE BRUSSELS I REGULATION AND INTERNATIONAL AND NATIONAL LAW -- Introduction -- I. - Article 71 of the Regulation and the Court's interpretation -- II. - Interpretation of Article 71 of the Regulation by national courts -- A. - Subsidiary Application of the Regulation -- B. - Clash of Specialised Conventions and Principles Underlying the Regulation -- III. - Shortcomings of the present system -- IV. - Possible solutions -- A. - Systematic Changes -- B. - Role of the National Courts - Possible Options Available Within the Current Framework -- Conclusion -- CHAPTER 9 - REFORM TO THE REGIME OF LIS PENDENS IN REGULATION BRUSSELS I BIS AND HARMONIZATION WITH CHINESE JURISDICTION -- Introduction -- I. - The regime of lis pendens in RBI and RBI bis -- II. - The regime of lis pendens in Chinese Law and challenge met by Chinese jurisdiction after promulgation of RBI bis -- III. - A possible bilateral international convention regarding lis pendens between China and the EU -- Conclusion -- CHAPTER 10 - (LACK OF) INTERNATIONAL JURISDICTION OVER THIRD-COUNTRY POLLUTERS: A TROJAN HORSE TO THE EU'S ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY? -- Introduction -- I. - The crystallization of un-equal access to justice in the frame of environmental torts caused by third-country polluters -- II. - The special character of environmental torts -- Conclusion.
CHAPTER 11 - RECONCILING THE EUROPEAN UNION SUCCESSION REGULATION WITH THE PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW OF THE UK.
Abstract:
European private international law is by now based mainly on a large body of uniform rules such as the Regulations Rome I, Rome II, Brussels I, Brussels I bis. This significant legislative output, however, does not take place in a vacuum. Rules of private international law have been earlier (and still are) adopted at national, international and even European level in scattered regulations and directives. The recent plethora of private international law rules gives rise to issues of delineation and calls for some sort of ordering as gaps, overlaps and contradictions become flagrant. At the same time, the resulting interactions can offer new insight, ideas and even opportunities at a more theoretical level. This book gathers a collection of essays resulting out of a series of international seminars held in Lyon, Barcelona and Louvain-la-Neuve. During those seminars, young researchers selected in an open call for papers had the opportunity to discuss their views among themselves as well as with various specialists of the field, such as more senior academics, EU civil servants, national experts and representatives of other international organisations. The book offers the fresh views of those who will in the future shape the dialectic between the various sources of private international law and attempts to launch a discussion on the "living together" of legal sources. Two ranges of topics are addressed in the book: - firstly, the relationship between EU private international law and national law (substantial and procedural) and/or international law (international instruments of private international law or of uniform substantive law); and - secondly, the relationship between EU private international law and other aspects of EU law (internal market rules of primary law, harmonisation through secondary law and other pieces of legislation enacted in the
realm of the area of freedom, security and justice).
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2019. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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