You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Lawrence Collins, a leading international lawyer, has made a profound contribution to the study and understanding of the Conflict of Laws in England during the past twenty years. He has successfully combined his practice in one of London's leading law firms with unparalleled academic achievement. This volume combines a number of his most widely acclaimed and influential articles on important aspects of the Conflict of Laws, including a reprint of his fascinating 1992 Hague Academy Lectures entitled "Provisional and Protective Measures in International Litigation." Collins has updated and written introductory prefaces for each article to outline the most important subsequent developments since their original publication. Scholarly and incisive, these essays will be compulsory reading for all academics and practitioners interested in international litigation.
Dicey, Morris & Collins on the Conflict of Laws is renowned worldwide as the foremost authority on private international law. The 1st Supplement to the 15th Edition brings the main work up-to-date and deals with all the developments since the publication of the main work: The recast Brussels I RegulationNew UK Supreme Court decisions on habitual residenceImportant new decisions on state immunityThe Sulamerica case in international arbitrationThe Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013All the many new European Court and Commercial Court cases on jurisdiction, judgments, contract and tor
"Lawrence Collins draws attention in this course to some of the most important and topical problems presented by the use and abuse of provisional and protective measures in international litigation. It is a vast range of material Professor Collins draws from: private and public international law, national and comparative law, European Community law and administrative law; the practice of national courts, and international and supranational courts and tribunals"--Publisher's description.
None
None
None