Buch, Englisch, 248 Seiten
Buch, Englisch, 248 Seiten
Reihe: Private Law in European Contex
ISBN: 978-90-411-3141-6
Verlag: Wolters Kluwer
This collection of essays reflects both the diversity of the group’s work and the common thread that runs through it. The core claim here is that the DCFR, despite the Commission’s characterization of its proposals as purely technical, cannot escape politics. The intent is to critically identify and evaluate the model of social justice underlying the DCFR.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
List of Contributors, Preface, List of Abbreviations,
Part One The Shaping of a European Private
Law
Chapter 1 An Optional
Instrument for Consumer Contracts in the EU: Conflict of Laws and Conflict of
Policies Aurelia Colombi Ciacchi Chapter 2 Grand European Code
Napoléon or Concise Uniform Contract Law? Defining the Scope of a Common Frame
of Reference Stefan Grundmann
Chapter 3 The DCFR: A
Technical or Political Toolbox? Ruth Sefton-Green
Chapter 4
Some Like It Soft: Soft Law and Hard Law in the Shaping of European Contract
Law Alessandro Somma Part Two Freedom of
Contract and Social Justice
Chapter
5 Party Autonomy and Freedom of Contract Today Guido Alpa
Chapter 6 The CFR and Social Justice Martijn Hesselink
Chapter 7 The DCFR, Public Policy, Mandatory
Rules, and the Welfare State Jacobien W. Rutgers
Part Three Consumer Protection
Chapter 8 Much Ado
About (Almost) Nothing: The Integration of the So-Called ‘Consumer Acquis’ in
the Draft Common Frame of Reference Brigitta Lurger
Chapter 9
Unfair Terms and Unfairness Test in Contracts between Businesses and
Consumers Marisa Meli Chapter 10
‘Technical Harmonization’ versus Substantive Differences: Termination and
Withdrawal in the Draft Common Frame of Reference Peter Rott
Part Four Other Specific Issues
Chapter 11 Non-contractual Liability
Arising Out of Damage Caused to Another: The Making of a Hybrid Gert
Brüggemeier Chapter 12 On the Economics of Good
Faith Acquisition Protection in the DCFR Arthur F. Salomons ,