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Conflict of Laws in a Globalized World

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Conflict of Laws in a Globalized World
By
Eckart Gottschalk, Ralf Michaels, Giesela Ruhl, Ja
Description
This book is a
contribution to the evolving transatlantic dialogue on the conflict
of laws as well as a tribute to Professor Arthur von Mehren from the
Harvard Law School. It contains ten contributions that discuss the
problems conflict of laws is facing in a globalized world. The first
five contributions deal with current legal topics in international
civil litigation and transatlantic judicial cooperation ranging from
the design of judgments conventions in general to the recently
adopted Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements and from
current problems involving negative declaratory actions in
international disputes to recent transatlantic developments relating
to service of process and collective proceedings. The remaining five
contributions focus on choice of law in international and
transatlantic relationships. They cover comparative and economic
dimensions of party autonomy, reflect on current discussions in the
choice of law relating to intellectual property rights, and engage in
critical discussions about the applicable law in antitrust law
litigation, international arbitration, and actions for punitive
damages.
Contents
Editor’s
preface; Bibliographical note; Part I. Remembering Arthur T. von
Mehren: 1. The last Euro-American legal scholar? Arthur Taylor von
Mehren (1922 - 2006) Jürgen Basedow; 2. Arthur Taylor von Mehren
and the Joseph Story Research Fellowship Peter L. Murray; 3. Building
bridges between legal systems - the life and work of Arthur T. von
Mehren Michael von Hinden; Part II. Transatlantic Litigation and
Judicial Cooperation in Civil and Commercial Matters: 4. Some
fundamental jurisdictional conceptions as applied in judgement
conventions Ralf Michaels; 5. The Hague Convention on Choice-of-Court
Agreements - was it worth the effort? Christian Thiele; 6. Lis
Pendens, negative declaratory-judgement actions and the first-in-time
principle Martin Gebauer; 7. Recent German jurisprudence on
cooperation with the US in civil and commercial matters: a defense of
sovereignty or judicial protectionism? Jan von Hein; 8. Collective
litigation German style - the act on model proceedings in capital
market disputes Moritz Balz and Feliz Blobel; Part III. Choice of Law
in Transatlantic Relationships: 9. Party autonomy in the private
international law of contracts: transatlantic convergence and
economic efficiency Gisela Ruhl; 10. The law applicable to
intellectual property rights: is the Lex Loci Protectionis a
pertinent choice of law approach? Eckart Gottschalk; 11. The
extraterritorial reach of antitrust law between legal imperialism and
harmonious co-existence: the empagram judgement of the US Supreme
Court from a European perpective Dietmar Baetge; 12. Mandatory
elements of the Choice-of-Law Process in international arbitration -
some reflections on Teubnerian and Kelsenian legal theory Matthias
Weller; 13. Application of foreign law to determine punitive damages-
a recent US Court contribution to Choice-of-Law evolution Oliver
Furtak.
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