Choice of law in international commercial contracts : global perspectives on the Hague Principles / general editors, Daniel Girsberger, Thomas Kadner Graziano, Jan L. Neels ; regional and special editors, Béligh Elbalti [and seven others] ; associate editor, Agatha Brandão de Oliveira.
Material type:
TextLanguage: İngilizce Series: Oxford private international law seriesPublisher: Oxford, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Oxford University Press, 2021Copyright date: ©2021Edition: First editionDescription: cxiv, 1251 pages ; 25 cmContent type: - text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780198840107
- 0198840101
- K1024 .C46 2021
| Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book
|
Merkez Kütüphane Genel Koleksiyon / Main Collection | Merkez Kütüphane | Genel Koleksiyon | K1024 .C46 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 0073714 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Principles on choice of law in international commercial contracts -- Part 1: General and special reports -- General comparative report / Daniel Girsberger, Thomas Kadner Graziano, and Jan L Neels -- The story of party autonomy / Symeon C Symeonides -- The provenance of the Hague Principles / Marta Pertegás -- HCCH / João Ribeiro-Bidaoui -- UNCITRAL / Luca Castellani and Cyril Emery -- UNIDROIT / Anna Veneziano -- International commercial arbitration / Lauro Gama, Daniel Girsberger, and José Antonio Moreno Rodríguez -- Part 2: National and regional reports -- Part 2.1: Africa / Jan L Neels and Eesa A Fredericks -- African principles of commercial private international law / Jan L Neels and Eesa A Fredericks -- OHADA / Justin Monsenepwo -- Angola and Mozambique / Rui Dias and Carl Friedrich Nordmeier -- Common law Africa / Richard Frimpong Oppong -- Democratic Republic of the Congo / Justin Monsenepwo -- Egypt / Yehya Ikram Ibrahim Badr -- Ethiopia / Fekadu Petros Gebremeskel -- Mauritius / Robin Cupido -- Morocco / Khalid Zaher -- South Africa / Jan L Neels -- Tunisia / Béligh Elbalti -- Part 2.2: Asia / Yuko Nishitani and Béligh Elbalti -- Asian principles of private international law / Naoshi Takasugi and Béligh Elbalti -- Bahrain / Béligh Elbalti and Hosam Osama Shaaban -- China (mainland) / Qisheng He -- Dubai International Financial Centre / Silke Noa Elrifai -- Hong Kong / Anselmo Reyes -- India / Jan L Neels -- Indonesia / John Lumbantobing and Bayu Seto Hardjowahono -- Iran / Nadjma Yassari -- Israel / Talia Einhorn -- Japan / Yuko Nishitani -- Kuwait / Amin Dawwas -- Lebanon / Marie-Claude Najm Kobeh -- Macau / Guangjian Tu -- Malaysia / Effendy Othman, Victor Wong Teck Fung, and Ahmad Zhaffir Rahmat -- Palestine / Amin Dawwas -- Qatar / Silke Noa Elrifai -- Singapore / Tiong Min Yeo -- South Caucasus / Hayk Kupelyants -- South Korea / Kwang Hyun Suk -- Taiwan / Hua-Kai Tsai -- United Arab Emirates / Kilian Bälz -- Vietnam / Duc Luong Doan and Thi Hong Trinh Nguyen -- Part 2.3: Australasia / Brooke Marshall -- Australia / Brooke Marshall -- New Zealand / Maria Hook -- Part 2.4: Europe / Thomas Kadner Graziano -- European Union / Thomas Kadner Graziano, Francisco Garcimartín Alférez, and Geert van Calster -- Iceland / Eiríkur Elís Þorláksson -- Liechtenstein / Helmut Heiss -- Norway / Giuditta Cordero-Moss -- Russia / Milana Karayanidi -- Switzerland / Thomas Kadner Graziano and Hannes Meyle -- Turkey / Nuray Ekşi -- Ukraine / Dmytro Vorobey -- United Kingdom / Andrew Dickinson -- Western Balkans / Donikë Qerimi -- Part 2.5: Latin America / Lauro Gama and José Antonio Moreno Rodríguez -- Organization of American states / José Antonio Moreno Rodríguez -- Argentina / Paula María All -- Bolivia / José Manuel Canelas Schütt -- Brazil / Lauro Gama, Carmen Tiburcio, and Felipe Albuquerque -- Chile / Jaime Gallegos-Zúñiga -- Colombia / Antonio Aljure Salame -- Costa Rica / Anayansy Rojas Chan and Mauricio París -- Guatemala / Pedro Mendoza Montano and Enrique Martinez Guzman -- Mexico / María Mercedes Albornoz and Nuria González-Martín -- Panama / Carlos Alberto Arrue Montenegro -- Paraguay / José Antonio Moreno Rodríguez -- Peru / Rorick Tovar Galván and Sara Sotelo -- Uruguay / Cecilia Fresnedo de Aguirre -- Venezuela / Claudia Madrid Martínez -- Part 2.6: North America / Geneviève Saumier -- Canada / Geneviève Saumier -- United States of America / Symeon C Symeonides and Neil B Cohen.
Although the possibility of making a choice of law in respect of international commercial contracts has become widely accepted, national law still diverges in many respects with regard to the scope and relevance of, and the limitations on, party autonomy, leading to uncertainty in international commercial relations. This book compares the Hague Principles on Choice of Law in International Commercial Contracts (2015) with national, regional, supranational, and international rules on choice of law around the world in order to chronicle the divergent approaches which exist today. The work is introduced by a comprehensive comparative report which sets out the similarities and differences between the featured national, regional, supranational, and international rules, comparing such rules with those of the Hague Principles, thereby initiating a discussion on further harmonization in the field. Another report focuses on the application of the Hague Principles in the context of international commercial arbitration. Dedicated chapters analyse the Hague Principles from a historical, theoretical, and international organizational point of view. Finally, examining each jurisdiction in detail, the book presents sixty national and regional article-by-article commentaries on the Hague Principles written by experts from all parts of the world. This dedicated and in-depth global comparative study of national, regional, supranational, and international rules provides a definitive reference guide to the key principles in respect of choice of law for international commercial contracts. -- Provided by publisher.
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