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Private International Law

2006
Abstract In the conventional understanding many chapters of this volume would fall within the traditional scope of private international law. Here, however, we use the expression as employed in Part Three of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation, with minor adjustments.
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Theorizing Private International Law

2016
Abstract This chapter focuses on the social and economic consequences of private international law, both for the distribution of power in a transnational setting and for issues of identity and community in a world in which new polities are emerging.
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Private International Law and Public Law

2015
The conspicuous absence of private international law from the current global governance debate may be traced in part to its traditional ‘public law taboo’, fed by liberal understandings of statehood and its characteristic public/private divide, in the context of the modern schism between the public and private branches of international law.
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Comparative Law And Private International Law

2006
Comparative law and private international law have had a long and intimate relationship. Traditionally, comparative law has interacted with private international law in three basic dimensions which can loosely be termed academic, legislative, and judicial. Comparative law has made private international law the object of scholarly study; it has assisted
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Private International Law

2020
Abstract This chapter begins by analysing the relevant Private International Law rules under EU law. This analysis distinguishes between non-insolvency and insolvency law rules. Outside of insolvency, the rules for the determination of jurisdiction and the recognition of court judgements, as well as the rules for the determination of the
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Private International Law

2019
Is Private International Law (PIL) still fit to serve its function in today’s global environment? In light of some calls for radical changes to its very foundations, this timely book investigates the ability of PIL to handle contemporary and international problems, and inspires genuine debate on the future of the field. [Abstract from the publisher]
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