Between Law and Politics—The Emergence of an EU Industrial Policy
ABSTRACT How do law and politics interact in shaping the relationship between the state and markets? To what extent can the law break free from the political and ideological beliefs which brought it about, and be repurposed to adjust to evolving assumptions and a new political‐economic Zeitgeist?
Paul Dermine, Maria Patrin
wiley +1 more source
EU Law as Private International Law? Re-Conceptualising the Country-Of-Origin Principle as Vested Rights Theory [PDF]
One of the most pertinent issues in contemporary European conflict of laws is the tension between Community law and traditional choice of law rules.
Michaels, Ralf
core +1 more source
Limitations on Jurisdiction and Arbitration Agreements Based on Applicable Law and the Identity of the Carrier in Cargo Claim Disputes [PDF]
The article demonstrates through an analysis of the limitations on choice of forum or arbitration agreements following the invalidity of a choice of law clause included in a charter party and/or a bill of lading (B/L). It is equally difficult enforcing a
Echebarria Fernández, J.
core +2 more sources
Switzerland: Political Developments and Data in 2024
Abstract In 2024, while Switzerland was no longer grappling with immediate crises, the lingering effects of an overlapping crisis remained evident. Public dissatisfaction grew, driven by perceptions that state interventions disproportionately favoured banks and large corporations, while the needs of ordinary citizens amid a cost‐of‐living crisis were ...
RAHEL FREIBURGHAUS
wiley +1 more source
Shared governance as a pathway to regional cooperation and development through the ItaipuCorpus
Abstract Motivation Cross‐border cooperation remains a critical challenge for sustainable development in regions marked by historical rivalries, geopolitical asymmetries, and socioenvironmental vulnerabilities. The Itaipu Binacional Hydroelectric Plant, jointly governed by Brazil and Paraguay, offers a unique case for examining how shared governance ...
Júlia Souza Luiz +1 more
wiley +1 more source
The limits of passive power: Competition law in Singapore and the EU's global legal influence
Abstract As the United States retreats from global rule‐making, the European Union (EU) must decide whether to shape global legal regimes actively or rely on its market power. Optimists claim that EU norms spread passively as a result of the Brussels Effect (BE), while sceptics point to transnational processes such as conditionality, policy learning ...
Yannis Karagiannis
wiley +1 more source
The New European Choice-Of-Law Revolution [PDF]
Conflict of laws in Europe was long viewed by outsiders as formalist, antiquated, and uninteresting. Now that the European Union has become more active in the field, things are changing, but most view these changes as a mere gradual evolution.
Michaels, Ralf
core +1 more source
Abstract This article examines the legal and ethical status of agreements to waive paternity in cases of unintended pregnancies and contrasts them with legal regimes governing anonymous and known sperm donations. Although these scenarios often result in the same functional outcome—severance of the biological father's legal relationship with the child ...
Shahar Lifshitz
wiley +1 more source
Scots law and the UK codification of bills of exchange [PDF]
No abstract ...
Anderson, Ross Gilbert
core
Does compliance with the global anticorruption regime require the use of artificial intelligence?
Abstract Business firms constantly hear that artificial intelligence has changed the world and that they must either utilize artificial intelligence or fall behind. By extension, this would be true of regulatory compliance as well as operations. This article challenges the mantra of artificial intelligence as a ubiquitous agent of change.
Philip M. Nichols
wiley +1 more source

