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This book provides the European structure of liability for failed contract negotiations through a comparative lens, with wider lessons for an international context. It will be of interest to researchers in the field of comparative contract and tort law, European private law, and private law theory.
List of contents
Introduction
Part I: Structure Of Liability for Contract Negotiations and Obligations to Contract1. Function of Pre-Contractual Liability
2. Structure of Pre-Contractual Liability
Part II: Liability for Contract Negotiations3. Structure and Functionning of Liability for Contract
4. Sanctions
5. Findings
Part III: Obligation to Negotiate or to Contract6. Circumventing Causal Uncertainty
7. The Obligation to Negotiate or to Contract
8. Alternative: Obliegenheit to Contract
9. Summary
Conclusion
About the author
Tom Hick is Senior Research Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for comparative and international private law in Hamburg. He conducts research on comparative law of obligations, comparative succession law, and private law theory with a focus on questions relating to social justice and sustainability. Previously, he has been a research and teaching assistant at the Institute for the Law of Obligations at the KU Leuven, Belgium, where he defended his doctoral dissertation in 2024. He also is a member of various international research groups and of the Friday Group, a Belgian think tank striving to integrate young Belgian citizens into the public debate on important societal issues.