Fr. 326.00

CHOICE OF COURT AGREEMENTS UNDER - Choice Of Court Agreements Under European International Instrument

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext The book is indispensable reading for anyone who wants to know how choice of court agreements are dealt with in the law now and will be dealt with after the 10 January 2015. It is not merely an excellent book in the pragmatic tradition of UK private international law scholarship ... but it is also a reference point that other authors in the field cannot afford to ignore. Informationen zum Autor Trevor Hartley is Professor Emeritus of Law at the London School of Economics, where he has taught since 1969, after five years at the University of Western Ontario, Canada. He has been a visiting professor at the Universities of California (Berkeley), Michigan, Florida, and Texas and at the College of Europe, Bruges. He has published many books and articles on EU Law and Private International Law, including International Commercial Litigation (Cambridge University Press, 2009), The Foundations of European Community Law, 7th ed. (Oxford University Press, 2010) and European Union Law in a Global Context (Cambridge University Press, 2004). He co-authored the official report on the 2005 Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements. He is a member of the American Law Institute and the Committee that advises the British Government on private international law (Ministry of Justice). Klappentext This is the first book to consider choice-of-court agreements in light of all European and international instruments: the 2005 Hague Convention! the Brussels 1 Regulation (both the 2000 and 2012 versions)! and the Lugano Convention of 2007. It benefits from thematic organisation according to principal questions and carefully chosen appendices. Zusammenfassung This is the first text to address all the instruments that will govern choice-of-court agreements in Europe and to engage in a practical discussion of their mutual relationship. The existing common law, which has dominated discussion of this subject for so long, will become less significant as European and international instruments become more widely applicable. The consequences of this, both for practitioners and business persons engaging in international transactions, are explained by thematic chapters covering all major issues affected. The work opens with an introduction to the components of a choice-of-court agreement and to the origins, principles, and status of the various instruments, making the text accessible to a broad practitioner audience. The scope of the instruments - territorial application, international application and subject-matter application - as well as conflicts between them, are addressed in Part II, which is devoted to guidance on deciding which instrument applies. Validity (substantive and formal), effects, remedies, and procedure are discussed in Part III, while Part IV tackles a range of more specialist areas, including insurance, consumer contracts, employment contracts, companies, and intellectual property. Comprehensive appendices follow, including the Hague Convention 2005 in its entirety, alongside extracts from Brussels I and Lugano, making this a standalone support for any practitioner facing unfamiliar questions in the area. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction; 1 Introduction; Which Instrument?; 2 Territorial Application; 3 From what date do the instruments apply?; 4 Subject-matter scope; 5 International Scope; 6 Conflict of Instruments; Validity and Effect; 7 Validity of Choice-of-Court Agreements; 8 Effects of Choice-of-Court Agreements; 9 Recognition and enforcement of judgments; 10 Remedies and Procedure; 11 Concurrent proceedings; Special Topics; 12 Insurance; 13 Consumer contracts under Brussels and Lugano; 14 Individual contracts of employment under Brussels and Lugano; 15 Immovable Property; 16 Companies; 17 Intellectual Property; Selected provisions from the Brussels Convention! the Brussels 1 Regulation and the Lugano Convention; Appendices; Choice-of-court provisions in the Brussels ...

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