Selected Essays

Selected Essays

Author: Aron Broches

Publisher: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers

Published: 1995-02-23

Total Pages: 568

ISBN-13: 9780792329060

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Aron Broches is a Dutch international lawyer and official. He was present at the Bretton Woods Monetary and Financial Conference in 1944 and he started work at the World Bank in 1946, where he stayed for over 30 years. While there he created the mechanisms for the settlement of disputes between States and foreign investors leading to the formation of the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) in 1967.


Selected Essays on the Conflict of Laws

Selected Essays on the Conflict of Laws

Author: Friedrich Juenger

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2021-10-25

Total Pages: 457

ISBN-13: 9004480439

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Friedrich K. Juenger on the conflict of laws is always worth attending to. Rejecting the "conventional wisdom" that prevails in the field, he sees the conflict of laws not as a discipline devoid of substantive values but as a powerful catalyst for multistate justice. Here is a wide-ranging collection of essays on a variety of problems posed by transactions that transcend state and national borders. The essays include a comparison of jurisdiction issues in the United States and the European Communities, opinions on forum shopping, a critique of interest analysis techniques, and a plea for a comparative approach to choice-of-law issues. Invaluable studies in the extraterritorial application of United States antitrust law, recognition of foreign money judgments and divorces, and regional conventions round out the collection. Published under the Transnational Publishers imprint.


Select Proceedings of the European Society of International Law, Volume 3, 2010

Select Proceedings of the European Society of International Law, Volume 3, 2010

Author: James Crawford

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2012-01-09

Total Pages: 420

ISBN-13: 1847318754

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This book continues the series Select Proceedings of the European Society of International Law, containing the proceedings of the Fourth Biennial Conference organised by ESIL and the University of Cambridge in 2010. The title of the conference was 'International Law 1989-2010: A Performance Appraisal'. The highlights, selected for publication in this volume, cover a wide spectrum of topics in international law.


Selected Essays on the Conflict of Laws

Selected Essays on the Conflict of Laws

Author: Friedrich K. Juenger

Publisher: Brill Nijhoff

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781571051165

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Friedrich K. Juenger on the conflict of laws is always worth attending to. Rejecting the "conventional wisdom" that prevails in the field, he sees the conflict of laws not as a discipline devoid of substantive values but as a powerful catalyst for multistate justice. Here is a wide-ranging collection of essays on a variety of problems posed by transactions that transcend state and national borders. The essays include a comparison of jurisdiction issues in the United States and the European Communities, opinions on forum shopping, a critique of interest analysis techniques, and a plea for a comparative approach to choice-of-law issues. Invaluable studies in the extraterritorial application of United States antitrust law, recognition of foreign money judgments and divorces, and regional conventions round out the collection. Published under the Transnational Publishers imprint.


Nineteenth Century Perspectives on Private International Law

Nineteenth Century Perspectives on Private International Law

Author: Roxana Banu

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2018-07-19

Total Pages: 353

ISBN-13: 0192551744

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Private International Law is often criticized for failing to curb private power in the transnational realm. The field appears disinterested or powerless in addressing global economic and social inequality. Scholars have frequently blamed this failure on the separation between private and public international law at the end of the nineteenth century and on private international law's increasing alignment with private law. Through a contextual historical analysis, Roxana Banu questions these premises. By reviewing a broad range of scholarship from six jurisdictions (the United States, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Italy, and the Netherlands) she shows that far from injecting an impetus for social justice, the alignment between private and public international law introduced much of private international law's formalism and neutrality. She also uncovers various nineteenth century private law theories that portrayed a social, relationally constituted image of the transnational agent, thus contesting both individualistic and state-centric premises for regulating cross-border inter-personal relations. Overall, this study argues that the inherited shortcomings of contemporary private international law stem more from the incorporation of nineteenth century theories of sovereignty and state rights than from theoretical premises of private law. In turn, by reconsidering the relational premises of the nineteenth century private law perspectives discussed in this book, Banu contends that private international law could take centre stage in efforts to increase social and economic equality by fostering individual agency and social responsibility in the transnational realm.


American Private International Law

American Private International Law

Author: Symeon Symeonides

Publisher: Kluwer Law International B.V.

Published: 2008-01-01

Total Pages: 372

ISBN-13: 9041127429

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This book was originally published as a monograph in the International Encyclopaedia of Laws/Private International Law.


A Commitment to Private International Law

A Commitment to Private International Law

Author: Hague Conference on Private International Law. Permanent Bureau

Publisher:

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781780681504

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Hans van Loon has been at the forefront of private international law for well over a quarter of a century. Since joining the Hague Conference on Private International Law in 1978, van Loon has presided over remarkable growth of the organization and significant changes to how it operates. He has been involved in the development of nine Hague Conventions. In his time as Secretary General, he has seen the organization's membership grow from 44 to 72 Members (with more than 60 non-Member States now party to at least one Hague Convention), which has turned the Hague Conference into a veritable world organization. The continued relevance of the Hague Conference in the 21st century owes much to the commitment of van Loon to private international law and his awareness of its role in a broader social context. This festschrift is a collection of contributions from friends and colleagues who have shared the negotiating table with Hans van Loon at various diplomatic sessions, collaborated with him on seminars and academic pursuits around the globe, and worked alongside him at the Permanent Bureau. Its pages are testament to a long and respected career, as well as to the meaningful relationships that Hans van Loon has developed along the way with academics, judges, practitioners, and government officials from various legal backgrounds.