Abstract The United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) has produced the most robust international insolvency regime applicable to countries around the world. The Model Law on Cross‐Border Insolvency (1997) is widely accepted and already very popular among African countries.
Pontian N. Okoli
wiley +1 more source
The Modern Trend Towards Exclusion of Recourse Against Transnational Arbitral Awards: A European Perspective [PDF]
This Article will analyze this trend [the liberal tradition in international commercial arbitration] and attempt to assess its impact on the efficiency of international commercial arbitration as a viable alternative to litigation before the national ...
Berger, Klaus Peter
core +1 more source
Penalty Clauses – What Has Changed? [PDF]
Building on two seminal cases that consider the character of penalty clauses, Paciocco v Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd from Australia and Cavendish Square Holding BV v.
Zeller, Bruno
core +2 more sources
The restructuring directive's stay: Post‐implementation perspectives and asset‐deployment risks
Abstract The Restructuring Directive addresses the stay's impact on security enforcement but not asset deployment. It leaves uncertainty on how security agreements interact with executory contracts, giving Member States discretion. This affects debtors' ability to dispose of encumbered assets and impacts creditors' contractual rights, ultimately ...
Vincent van Hoof
wiley +1 more source
Airspace sovereignty in the Chicago Regime: a reality check [PDF]
Air service agreements (ASAs) under the ‘Chicago Regime’ of exchanged traffic rights are coupled with the overarching principle of State sovereignty recognized in Article 1 of the Chicago Convention.
Truxal, S.
core
Subordination of related party claims in insolvency: A suggestive framework for Asian regimes
Abstract Related party loans, due to their inherent nature, warrant a higher threshold for scrutiny when compared to loans extended by unrelated parties. Why were these monies advanced as loans, carrying higher priority in insolvency, rather than being invested as share capital?
Aditya Jain, Dhanya Jha, Rebecca Parry
wiley +1 more source
THE RIGHT TO MORTGAGE IN THE LIGHT OF EUROPEAN CIVIL CODES
The most recent history of the development of the institution of mortgage began with the great modifications of the nineteenth century. The large codification activity realized through civil codes, such as the French Civil Code, the General Austrian ...
Emine Zendeli
doaj
Varieties of Democracy Aid Approaches: The Role of Donors' Domestic Ideology
ABSTRACT After the end of the Cold War, DAC donors increased their efforts of democracy promotion in developing countries. Among other instruments, DAC donors increasingly use democracy aid to improve democracy abroad. However, DAC donors differ in their allocation and delivery strategy of democracy aid.
Jean‐Baptiste Puginier
wiley +1 more source
Impact of Nitrogen Deposition on Carbon and Nitrogen Cycling in Peatlands Under Land‐Use Change
ABSTRACT Increasing nitrogen (N) deposition significantly alters carbon and N dynamics in peatlands by affecting microbial processes, enhancing greenhouse gas emissions and nutrient leaching into adjacent waters. However, how peatland conversion for agriculture and forestry influences the fate of added N under elevated atmospheric deposition remains ...
Yujing Deng +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Restituting Justice: Applying the Holocaust Restitution Process to Subsequent Genocides and Human Rights Violations [PDF]
This master’s thesis was developed at KTH-dESA, the division of Energy Systems Analysis of the Royal Institute of Technology of Stockholm, in close collaboration with the research organization Prayas Energy Group (PEG) and the Indian government ...
Moerdler, Zahava
core +2 more sources

