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Оглавление
- Efficiency in Private International Law
- Copyright
- Table of contents
- Chapter I. Introduction
- Chapter II. Conflicts revolution through the lens of efficiency
- 2.1. Traditional approaches
- 2.1.1. Joseph Beale and the vested rights doctrine
- 2.1.2. The adoption of the First Restatement
- 2.1.3. Criticism of the First Restatement
- 2.2. The choice of law revolution
- 2.2.1. Departure from traditional approaches
- (a) Auten v. Auten
- (b) Babcock v. Jackson
- 2.2.2. Government interest analysis
- (a) false conflicts
- (b) true conflicts
- (c) “unprovided-for” cases
- 2.2.3. Criticism of the interest analysis
- 2.2.4. Leflar’s “better law” approach
- 2.2.5. Principles of preference
- 2.2.1. Departure from traditional approaches
- 2.3. The Second Restatement
- 2.4. Economic analysis of conflict of laws
- 2.4.1. Public and private utilities
- 2.4.2. Legal certainty or flexibility : rule versus standard
- 2.4.3. Criticism of economic analysis and emergence of pragmatic approaches
- 2.1. Traditional approaches
- Chapter III. Uniform law and private international law — is uniform law more desirable than private international law?
- 3.1. Critical analysis of the conventional arguments
- 3.2. Costs and benefits analysis
- 3.2.1. Mapping of issues
- 3.2.2. Uniformity and diversity : costs and benefits analysis
- 3.2.3. Under what conditions might private international law be more beneficial ?
- 3.3. Empirical analysis
- 3.4. Conclusion
- Chapter IV. Uniform private international law
- 4.1. Introduction
- 4.2. Incentive analysis on the unification of private international law — focusing on the maintenance phase
- 4.3. Conditions for harmonization and unification
- 4.3.1. Interactions
- 4.3.2. Long-term relationship
- 4.3.3. Multiple contacts
- 4.3.4. Benefits of co-operation
- 4.4. Analysis
- Chapter V. Unification of intellectual property law
- 5.1. Intellectual property across the borders
- 5.2. A rocky road towards international harmonization of IP
- 5.3. Territorial rights in the global market
- 5.4. Unification of international IP law: cost and benefit analysis
- 5.5. Unification of private international law of IP
- 5.5.1. Scholarly initiatives
- 5.5.2. Rationale from an economic perspective
- Chapter VI. Cross-border insolvency and private international law
- 6.1. Three approaches to cross-border insolvency
- 6.1.1. Territorialism
- 6.1.2. Universalism
- 6.1.3. Contractualism
- 6.1.4. Pros and cons
- 6.2. Incentive analysis
- 6.2.1. Mapping of issues
- 6.2.2. Mapping of the three opinions
- 6.2.3. Departure from one-size-fits-all approach
- 6.3. Analysis
- 6.4. Conclusions
- 6.1. Three approaches to cross-border insolvency
- Chapter VII. Concluding remarks
- Bibliography
- About the author
- Biographical note
- Principal publications
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