Private international law : idealism, pragmatism, eclecticism /

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Hlavní autor: Symeonides, Symeon, 1949- (Autor)
Typ dokumentu: Kniha
Jazyk:Angličtina
Vydáno: Leiden : Brill, 2021
Edice:Hague Academy of International Law Monographs
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On-line přístup:Elektronická verze přístupná pouze pro studenty a pracovníky MU
Příbuzné jednotky:Tištěná verze:: Private international law : idealism, pragmatism, eclecticism
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245 1 0 |a Private international law :  |b idealism, pragmatism, eclecticism /  |c by Symeon C. Symeonides 
264 1 |a Leiden :  |b Brill,  |c 2021 
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490 1 |a The Hague Academy of International Law Monographs ;  |v volume 11 
504 |a Obsahuje bibliografii, bibliografické odkazy a rejstřík 
505 0 |a Intro -- The Hague Academy of International Law: Private International Law Idealism, Pragmatism, Eclecticism -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Biographical Note -- Principal Publications -- Abbreviations -- List of PIL Codifications -- List of EU Regulations -- List of International Conventions -- List of Tables and Charts -- Foreword -- Introduction -- Chapter I Historical Foundations -- Section 1. Introduction -- Section 2. From Ancient Greece to Medieval Italy -- Section 3. Early Footings: Bartolus, Statutists, and Unilateralism -- Section 4. Huber's Comity -- Section 5. The Nineteenth Century: The Classical PIL Edifice -- A. Story -- B. Wächter -- C. Savigny and Multilateralism -- D. Other Nineteenth Century Scholars -- Section 6. The Twentieth Century -- A. The Two Halves -- B. Beale and the Traditional American Choice-of-Law System -- 1. Territoriality -- 2. Vested Rights -- 3. The First Conflicts Restatement -- Section 7. Summary: The Classical PIL System -- Section 8. The Recent Codification Movement -- Chapter II. Substantivist Carve-Outs -- Section 1. The Original Substantivist Method -- Section 2. Contemporary Substantivist Carve-Outs -- A. Legislative Substantivism -- 1. Internationally -- 2. Regionally -- 3. Nationally -- B. Non-State, Anational Substantivism -- C. Substantivism in Arbitration -- D. Substantivism in Adjudication -- Section 3. Summary -- Chapter III. The "International" in Private International Law -- Section 1. What's in a Name? -- A. Conflict of Laws -- B. Private International Law -- Section 2. Internationality -- Section 3. International Uniformity -- Section 4. Interstate Uniformity -- Section 5. Conclusions -- Chapter IV. The "Private" in Private International Law -- Section 1. Introduction: Private or Public Law? -- Section 2. Brainerd Currie and State Interests -- A. Introduction. 
505 8 |a B. Do States Have an Interest in Multistate Disputes between Private -- C. Are State Interests Ascertainable? -- D. Re-conceptualizing State Interests -- E. Can an Interest-Based Approach Rationally Resolve Conflicts? -- 1. False Conflicts -- 2. True Conflicts -- 3. No-Interest Cases -- F. Summary -- Section 3. Not "Only in America": Recognition of State Interests Elsewhere -- A. Not for Export -- B. Unilateralist Tools -- C. Multilateral but Non-Neutral Rules -- D. Constitutionalization of PIL -- Section 4. Conclusions -- Chapter V. Unilateralist Encroachments -- Section 1. Introduction -- A. Misplaced Labels -- B. History -- C. The Differences -- Section 2. The Resilience of Unilateralism -- Section 3. Unilateralism in Academic Doctrine -- A. In Europe -- B. In the United States -- Section 4. Not "Only in America": The Ubiquity of Unilateralism -- A. Unilateral Choice-of-Law Rules in PIL Codifications -- 1. Old-Fashioned, General Unilateral Rules -- 2. Unilateral Rules for Tort Conflicts -- 3. Multiple Nationalities -- 4. Capacity -- 5. Marriage -- 6. Divorce -- 7. Adoption -- 8. Maintenance -- 9. Successions -- 10. Formal Validity -- 11. Contracts -- 12. Intellectual Property -- 13. Mea Culpa -- B. Mandatory Rules, or Rules of Immediate Application -- C. Unilateralism in Substantive Statutes -- 1. "Localizing Rules": Concept and Function -- 2. Consumer Contracts -- 3. Insurance contracts -- 4. Employment Contracts -- 5. Franchise, Distributorship, and Commercial Agency Contracts -- 6. Other Contracts -- 7. Antitrust -- Section 5. Symbiosis -- A. Unilateralism is Alive and Kicking -- B. Methodological Implications: From Antagonism to Symbiosis -- C. Unilateralism and Parochialism -- D. The Unilaterality of Multilateralism -- E. Comparison -- F. Combining Multilateralism with Accommodative Unilateralism. 
505 8 |a Chapter VI. The Material Tempering of Conflicts Justice -- Section 1. The Question -- Section 2. The Orthodox Answer: "Conflicts Justice" -- Section 3. The Heretical Answer: "Material Justice" -- A. The Thesis -- B. Relation with Other Approaches -- C. The American Version -- 1. David F. Cavers -- 2. Robert A. Leflar -- a. Leflar's Approach -- b. Judicial Reception -- 3. Other American Authors -- D. European Perspectives -- Section 4. Covert Result Selectivism in the Courts -- Section 5. Overt Result Selectivism in Legislation -- A. Introduction -- B. Result-Selective Choice-of-Law Rules in General -- C. Rules Favoring the Validity of Certain Juridical Acts (favor validitatis) -- 1. Testaments (favor testamenti) -- a. Formal Validity -- b. Substantive Validity -- 2. Other Juridical Acts (favor negotii) -- a. Formal Validity -- b. Capacity -- D. Rules Favoring a Certain Status -- 1. Legitimacy (favor legitimationis) -- 2. Filiation (favor infantis) -- 3. Acknowledgment -- 4. Adoption -- 5. Marriage (favor matrimonii) -- 6. Divorce (favor divortii) -- E. Rules Favoring One Party: Choice of Law by, or for the Benefit of, One Party -- 1. Pre-Dispute Choice by One Party -- 2. Post-dispute Choice by, or for the Benefit of One Party -- a. Cross-Border Torts -- (1) Favor Laesi for All Cross-Border Torts -- (2) Favor Laesi in Products Liability -- (3) Favor Laesi in Other Cross-Border Torts -- (4) Summary -- b. Choice by Owner of Stolen Property -- c. Choice by Unwed Mother -- d. Court Choice for the Benefit of Maintenance Obligees -- e. Court Choice for the Benefit of Children and Other Weak Parties -- 3. Protecting Consumers or Employees from the Consequences of an Adverse Choice-of-Law Clause -- Section 6. Conclusions -- A. Summary -- B. Not "Only in America" -- C. Result Selectivism in Legislation and Adjudication -- D. Exceptional?. 
505 8 |a Chapter VII. The Softening of Concepts and Rules -- Section 1. Introduction -- Section 2. The Virtual Abandonment of Connecting Factors in the United States -- Section 3. Not "Only in America": The Softening of Connecting Factors in Recent Codifications -- A. The Closer or Closest Connection -- 1. The Closest Connection as the Principal Connecting Factor -- 2. The Closest Connection in Specific Roles -- a. The Closest Connection as a Presumption in Contract Conflicts, Subject to a Closer-Connection Escape -- b. The Closest Connection as a Presumption in Tort Conflicts Subject to a Closer-Connection Escape -- c. The Closest Connection as a Connecting Factor in Other Conflicts -- d. Close Connection and Mandatory Rules -- e. The Closest Connection as a Tiebreaker -- f. The Closest Connection as a Pointer in Cases Involving a Federal or Other Plurilegal State -- g. The Closest Connection as a Gap-Filler for Unprovided-For Cases -- B. Other Soft Connecting Factors -- Section 4. Escape Clauses -- A. General Escapes -- B. Specific Escapes -- 1. Escapes Based on the "Closer Connection" -- 2. Escapes Based On Other Factors -- C. Assessment of Escapes -- 1. Too Much Geography, Too Little Principle -- 2. Issue-by-Issue Deployment -- Section 5. The Movement toward Flexibility -- A. The Perennial Tension -- B. The American Overreaction -- C. Corrective Action -- D. A Cautious Evolution -- E. Codification and Flexibility -- Section 6. Conclusions -- Chapter VIII. The Narrowing of Legal Categories -- Section 1. The Classical Model: "Legal Relations" -- Section 2. American Developments -- A. From Broad Categories to Issues -- B. Issue-by-Issue Analysis -- C. Dépeçage -- 1. What Is Dépeçage? -- 2. What Dépeçage Is Not -- 3. In the Abstract, Dépeçage is Neither Good nor Bad -- 4. Occasionally, Dépeçage Is Problematic -- 5. Dépeçage in Practice. 
505 8 |a Section 3. Not "Only in America": Dépeçage in Codified PIL Systems -- Section 4. Dépeçage in the Rome Convention and the Rome Regulations -- A. Rome Convention and Rome I Regulation -- B. Rome II -- Section 5. Dépeçage in Other Modern Codifications -- A. Statutory and Voluntary Dépeçage -- 1. Contracts -- a. Statutory Dépeçage -- b. Voluntary Dépeçage -- 2. Torts -- 3. Marriage -- 4. Matrimonial Property Regimes -- 5. Successions -- 6. Trusts -- B. Judicial Dépeçage -- 1. Preliminary or Incidental Question -- 2. Ordre Public -- 3. Mandatory Rules -- 4. Escape Clauses -- Section 6. Conclusions -- Chapter IX. Party Autonomy -- Section 1. Introduction -- Section 2. The History of Party Autonomy -- A. An Example from Antiquity -- B. The Parties' Implied Intention and the Lex Loci Solutionis -- C. Party Autonomy as an a Priori Rule: Mancini -- D. Legislative Endorsements in the Nineteenth Century -- E. The First Half of the Twentieth Century -- F. The Subsequent Triumph and Contemporary Dominance of Party Autonomy -- Section 3. The Scope of Party Autonomy -- A. Exemptions from Scope -- B. Contractual and Non-Contractual Issues -- C. Substantive vs Procedural Law -- D. Substantive Law vs PIL -- E. State Law vs Non-State Norms -- Section 4. Limitations to Party Autonomy within its Delineated Scope -- A. Determining the Lex Limitativa -- 1. Group 1: Lex Fori (Exclusively) -- 2. Group 2: The Lex Causae (Primarily) -- 3. Group 3: Intermediate Solutions and Combinations -- a. Rome I -- b. Other Systems -- c. The Hague Principles -- B. The Triggering Thresholds and Gradations of Limitations to Party Autonomy -- 1. The Ordre Public of the Lex Fori -- 2. The "Overriding" Mandatory Rules of the Lex Fori -- 3. The Public Policy of the Lex Causae -- 4. The "Simple" Mandatory Rules -- 5. No Threshold -- Section 5. Conclusions. 
505 8 |a Chapter X. The Challenge of the Internet. 
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