You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
This book presents a complete and coherent view of the subject of Common European Sales Law from a range of European perspectives. The book offers a comparison of the CESL with the CISG, as well as pre-existing instruments, including the Draft Common Frame of Reference (DCFR) and the Principles of European Contract Law (PECL). It analyses the process of enactment of CESL and its scope of application, covering areas such as the sale of goods, the supplying (licensing) of digital content, the supply of trade-related services, and consumer protection. It examines the design of the CESL bifurcating businesses into large and small-to-medium sized enterprises, and the providing of rules covering digital content and the supply of trade-related services. Lastly, it studies the field of application of the CESL combined with the already existing EU consumer protection laws, as well as nation-specific laws.
This book presents a critical analysis of the rules on the contents and effects of contracts included in the proposal for a Common European Sales Law (CESL). The European Commission published this proposal in October 2011 and then withdrew it in December 2014, notwithstanding the support the proposal had received from the European Parliament in February 2014. On 6 May 2015, in its Communication ‘A Digital Single Market Strategy for Europe’, the Commission expressed its intention to “make an amended legislative proposal (...) further harmonising the main rights and obligations of the parties to a sales contract”. The critical comments and suggestions contained in this book, to be unde...
Protecting Financial Consumers in Europe provides an authoritative account of what is state-of-the-art in the field of contracts relating to selected financial services, and the resolution of disputes arising out of such contracts by ADR bodies in Europe, both at national and EU level.
«Dir-nos valencians és la nostra manera de dir-nos europeus». Aquesta paràfrasi de Joan Fuster resulta ben precisa: el poble valencià, amb una identitat pròpia, forma part indestriable del mosaic de nacions que anomenem Europa. Al segle XIII, a la riba occidental de la Mediterrània –el solar de les Espanyes–, es constituïa el Regne de València sobre la base d’una de les expressions més reeixides del pactisme medieval: la foralitat, que es perllongarà fins el 1707. El valencianisme polític, maduració del valencianisme cultural de la Renaixença, ressitua la recuperació de les institucions històriques en el marc de la modernitat i la democràcia. En l’actual context global podem albirar un indefugible horitzó federal: l’articulació del País Valencià dins la Unió Europea, i encara en un Estat Espanyol autènticament plurinacional. Els estudis recollits en aquest volum, pertanyents a la filosofia del dret i a altres disciplines jurídiques, així com també a la ciència política i a la història social, volen contribuir a bastir una via nacional valenciana equilibrada, justa i integradora.
Publicação Semestral Oficial do Conselho Internacional de Estudos Contemporâneos em Pós-Graduação
Das Buch befasst sich mit der sog. Digitale-Inhalte-Richtlinie aus dem Jahr 2019 und ihrer Umsetzung in den zentralen europäischen Kodifikationsstrukturen Deutschland und Frankreich. Es zeichnet den Entwicklungsprozess der Richtlinie nach und umfasst zum einen ihre Entstehung und das europäische Konzept für ein Digitalvertragsrecht und zum anderen ihre Umsetzung in den mitgliedstaatlichen Rechtsordnungen.
As part of the European integration, an ambitious programme of harmonisation of European private law is taking place. This new edition in the Swedish Studies in European Law series, the work of both legal scholars and politicians, aims to create a modern codification in the tradition of the great continental codifications such as the BGB and the Code Civil. A significant step towards this development was taken in 2009 with the creation of the Draft Common Frame of Reference which contains model rules for a large part of central private law. The process raises a number of questions. What are the advantages and disadvantages of such an intensive process of harmonisation? Are there lessons to be learnt from the Europeanisation of private law through history? Are there any further steps which have been taken in order to create a European private law? What is the future of European private law? These crucial questions were discussed at a conference in Stockholm, sponsored by the Swedish Network of European Legal Studies. This important volume includes the answers offered by leading scholars in the field.