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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).