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The Making of European Private Law: Why, How, What, Who / ed. by Luigi Moccia.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Munich : Otto Schmidt/De Gruyter european law pub, [2013]Copyright date: 2013Description: 1 online resource (225 p.)Content type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 9783866539907
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 346.24 23
LOC classification:
  • KJE994.95 .M35 2013
Other classification:
  • online - DeGruyter
Online resources:
Contents:
Frontmatter -- Foreword -- List of Authors -- Table of Contents -- European Private Law: Why, How, What and Who? -- The Europeanisation of Private Law: Problems and Perspectives -- The Commission Proposal for a “Regulation on a Common European Sales Law (CESL)” – Too Broad or not Broad Enough? -- The ‘Legal Basis’ of European Private Law in the Light of EU Constitutionalisation -- European Law: From ‘Market’ to ‘Citizenship’ -- A Common European Sales Law (CESL) for Business-to-Business Contracts -- The ‘Instruments’ for Implementing European Private Law – The Influence of the ECJ Case Law on the Development and Formation of European Private Law -- Optional Law for Firms and Consumers: Economic Benefits of Opting into the Common European Sales Law? -- European Consumer Law and its Consolidation -- The Internal Relationships of EU Consumer Contract Laws: Unfair Contract Terms, Unfair Commercial Practices and CESL -- European Property Law – Transfer of Ownership of Movables -- From Euratom Property Law to European Union Property Law: A Concise Overview of the Development Towards a European Property Law -- Which Future for the European Law of Successions? -- Interpretation of Contracts in European Private Law -- Incorporation and Unfairness of Standard Contract Terms Under the Proposal for a Common European Sales Law -- The Application of the CESL to a Contract for the Supply of Digital Content (e.g. Software) -- A Critical First Glance at the Common European Sales Law Project by the Digital Consumer Law Approach
Summary: After Lisbon, European integration has moved towards new and more ambitious objectives, with the aim of strengthening the Union’s institutional architecture as well as rationalising and legitimising its legal order.Within this broad context, the making of European private law is a challenge that faces basic questions, such as:"Why European private law is needed?","How European private law could and should be set up?","What areas, to what extent and what policy objectives could and should be involved?" and"Who carries the responsibility of making it?".The book, through a variety of thematic contributions, offers several *nsights for a wide-ranging reflection on such issues, together with a more specific analysis of the most recent Commission’s proposal for a regulation on a "Common European Sales Law" (CESL).Summary: Die Vorbereitungen laufen bereits viele Jahre, nun liegt er endlich vor: der Entwurf der Europäischen Kommission für ein Gemeinsames Europäisches Kaufrecht als Optionales Instrument. Beteiligte an den Vorarbeiten und wichtige Kritiker derselben setzen sich in diesem höchst empfehlenswerten Buch mit dem Kommissionsentwurf auseinander. Wie wird die Harmonisierung des europäischen Vertragsrechts durch den Entwurf vorangetrieben? Wie "schlägt" sich der Entwurf im Vergleich zum BGB, zum DCFR oder zu den Acquis-Principles? Beleuchtet werden insbesondere Irrtumsanfechtung, AGB-Kontrolle, allgemeines und besonderes Leistungsstörungsrecht beim Kauf und bei verbundenen Dienstleistungen sowie übergreifende Fragestellungen zum Verbraucherrecht. Der Band wird abgerundet durch eine Synopse des Kommissionsentwurfs und der vorangegangenen Machbarkeitsstudie, in der die Entwicklung des Textes deutlich wird.
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Item type Current library Call number URL Status Notes Barcode
eBook eBook Biblioteca "Angelicum" Pont. Univ. S.Tommaso d'Aquino Nuvola online online - DeGruyter (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Online access Not for loan (Accesso limitato) Accesso per gli utenti autorizzati / Access for authorized users (dgr)9783866539907

Frontmatter -- Foreword -- List of Authors -- Table of Contents -- European Private Law: Why, How, What and Who? -- The Europeanisation of Private Law: Problems and Perspectives -- The Commission Proposal for a “Regulation on a Common European Sales Law (CESL)” – Too Broad or not Broad Enough? -- The ‘Legal Basis’ of European Private Law in the Light of EU Constitutionalisation -- European Law: From ‘Market’ to ‘Citizenship’ -- A Common European Sales Law (CESL) for Business-to-Business Contracts -- The ‘Instruments’ for Implementing European Private Law – The Influence of the ECJ Case Law on the Development and Formation of European Private Law -- Optional Law for Firms and Consumers: Economic Benefits of Opting into the Common European Sales Law? -- European Consumer Law and its Consolidation -- The Internal Relationships of EU Consumer Contract Laws: Unfair Contract Terms, Unfair Commercial Practices and CESL -- European Property Law – Transfer of Ownership of Movables -- From Euratom Property Law to European Union Property Law: A Concise Overview of the Development Towards a European Property Law -- Which Future for the European Law of Successions? -- Interpretation of Contracts in European Private Law -- Incorporation and Unfairness of Standard Contract Terms Under the Proposal for a Common European Sales Law -- The Application of the CESL to a Contract for the Supply of Digital Content (e.g. Software) -- A Critical First Glance at the Common European Sales Law Project by the Digital Consumer Law Approach

restricted access online access with authorization star

http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec

After Lisbon, European integration has moved towards new and more ambitious objectives, with the aim of strengthening the Union’s institutional architecture as well as rationalising and legitimising its legal order.Within this broad context, the making of European private law is a challenge that faces basic questions, such as:"Why European private law is needed?","How European private law could and should be set up?","What areas, to what extent and what policy objectives could and should be involved?" and"Who carries the responsibility of making it?".The book, through a variety of thematic contributions, offers several *nsights for a wide-ranging reflection on such issues, together with a more specific analysis of the most recent Commission’s proposal for a regulation on a "Common European Sales Law" (CESL).

Die Vorbereitungen laufen bereits viele Jahre, nun liegt er endlich vor: der Entwurf der Europäischen Kommission für ein Gemeinsames Europäisches Kaufrecht als Optionales Instrument. Beteiligte an den Vorarbeiten und wichtige Kritiker derselben setzen sich in diesem höchst empfehlenswerten Buch mit dem Kommissionsentwurf auseinander. Wie wird die Harmonisierung des europäischen Vertragsrechts durch den Entwurf vorangetrieben? Wie "schlägt" sich der Entwurf im Vergleich zum BGB, zum DCFR oder zu den Acquis-Principles? Beleuchtet werden insbesondere Irrtumsanfechtung, AGB-Kontrolle, allgemeines und besonderes Leistungsstörungsrecht beim Kauf und bei verbundenen Dienstleistungen sowie übergreifende Fragestellungen zum Verbraucherrecht. Der Band wird abgerundet durch eine Synopse des Kommissionsentwurfs und der vorangegangenen Machbarkeitsstudie, in der die Entwicklung des Textes deutlich wird.

Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.

In English.

Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 26. Aug 2024)