Fr. 376.00

Cross-Border Consumer Contracts

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

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Zusatztext In pointing out the economic imperatives! Hill has done us a service! by focussing our attention on the only realistic means of improving the situation! and by dispelling complacency. He sets before us clearly and unsparingly all the current options! with thie limitations! and for the moment lawyers and advisers must work within them Informationen zum Autor Jonathan Hill studied law at the Universities of Birmingham (LLB) and Cambridge (LLM). He was appointed to a lectureship at the University of Bristol in 1984. He was promoted to a readership in 1991 and to a personal chair in 1996. His has written extensively in the field of private international law and was a member of the editorial team for Dicey and Morris, The Conflict of Laws (13th edn, 2000). Klappentext This book provides an analysis of the legal regimes regulating the resolution of disputes arising out of non-domestic consumer contracts (for example, contracts concluded between a consumer from one country and a supplier from another country). Zusammenfassung Until relatively recently, almost all contracts were domestic: both the consumer and the supplier were from the same country and the situation involved no substantial foreign elements. Technological changes (in terms of international travel, means of communication and information technology) have meant that it is a more frequent occurrence for consumer contracts to involve a cross-border dimension. This book explores the legal regimes which seek to deal with disputes which arise out of such cross-border consumer contracts. In terms of private international law, English law traditionally treated consumer contracts no differently from commercial contracts. However, at European level, jurisdictional and choice of law issues arising out of certain consumer contracts are subject to specific rules. The first part of the book focuses on these European developments and seeks to explain why the private litigation model for the resolution of disputes arising out of cross-border consumer contracts has failed to deal adequately with the problems generated by such contracts. Subsequent to these failures, alternative mechanisms for resolving contractual disputes have a particular significance in the consumer context. The second part of the book focuses on an evaluation of these alternative dispute resolution mechanisms, including online dispute resolution....

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