Alternative Ways to Ius Commune
by
Anne Keirse
Book Details
Format
Paperback / Softback
ISBN-10
1780680899
ISBN-13
9781780680897
Publisher
Intersentia Ltd
Imprint
Intersentia Ltd
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Jul 19th, 2012
Print length
266 Pages
Weight
480 grams
Dimensions
23.50 x 16.90 x 1.60 cms
Product Classification:
Private / Civil law: general works
Ksh 10,000.00
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In 2011, two major instruments of European contract law were published: the 2011 Consumer Rights Directive (CRD) was enacted and the proposal for a Common European Sales Law (CESL) was launched. Both instruments aim at improving the internal market. Whereas the CRD aims at B2C contracts, the CESL may be applied, as an optional instrument, both to B2C and B2B contracts. In this book, both instruments are discussed. The book represents the most important developments in this area of European private law. Contents include: approaching the CRD from an historical and a competition law perspective * an argument that the way the CESL is drafted endangers its chances of being applied in practice * matters regarding the remedies for non-conformity under the CESL * the development of European private law, from the 1975 Consumer Policy Program to the CRD and the CESL * the relationship between private law, global governance, and the European Union * the harmonization of European matrimonial property law. (Series: Ius Commune Europaeum - Vol. 105)
In 2011, two major instruments of European contract law were published: the 2011 Consumer Rights Directive (CRD) was enacted and the proposal for a Common European Sales Law (CESL) was launched. Both instruments aim at improving the internal market. Whereas the CRD aims at B2C contracts, the CESL may be applied, as an optional instrument, both to B2C and B2B contracts. In this book, both instruments are discussed. Decock and Chirita approach the CRD from an historical and a competition law perspective; Van Schagen argues that the way the CESL is drafted endangers its chances of being applied in practice. De Bruijn, Dang Vu, Kruisinga, Jansen and Keirse address several matters regarding the remedies for non-conformity under the CESL. The book opens, however, with three more general papers. Loos and Keirse first address the development of European private law, from the 1975 Consumer Policy Programme to the CRD and the CESL. Wouters addresses the relationship between private law, global governance and the European Union, and Boele-Woelki draws attention to the harmonisation of European matrimonial property law. This book thus represents the most important developments in the area of European private law. As such, it will provide important insights for the practitioner and academic interested in the course of these developments.
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