Buch, Englisch, Band 1, 1252 Seiten, Format (B × H): 171 mm x 244 mm, Gewicht: 1657 g
Ius Commune Casebooks for the Common Law of Europe
Buch, Englisch, Band 1, 1252 Seiten, Format (B × H): 171 mm x 244 mm, Gewicht: 1657 g
Reihe: Ius Commune Casebooks for the Common Law of Europe
ISBN: 978-1-84113-750-6
Verlag: Bloomsbury Academic
The casebook focuses on uncovering differences and similarities between Europe's major legal systems: French, German, Dutch and English law are examined, while Austrian and Belgian law are also touched upon. The book combines excerpts from primary source materials (case law and legislation) and from doctrine and soft law. In doing so it presents a faithful picture of the systems concerned.
Separate chapters deal with the various types of property rights, their creation, transfer and destruction, with security rights (such as mortgages, pledges, retention of title) as well as with harmonising and unifying efforts at the EU and global level.
Through the functional approach taken by the Ius Commune Casebooks this volume clearly demonstrates that traditional comparative insights no longer hold. The law of property used to be regarded as a product of historical developments and political ideology, which were considered to be almost set in stone and assumed to render any substantial form of harmonisation or approximation very unlikely. Even experienced comparative lawyers considered the divide between common law and civil law to be so deep that no common ground - so it was thought - could be found. However economic integration, in particular integration of financial markets and freedom of establishment, has led to the integration of particular areas of property law such as mortgage law and enforceable security instruments (eg retention of title). This pressure towards integration has led comparative lawyers to refocus their interest from contract, tort and unjustified enrichment to property law and delve beneath its surface.
This book reveals that today property law systems are closer to one another than previously assumed, that common ground can be found and that differences can be analysed in a new light to enable comparison and further the development of property law in Europe.
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PrefaceIntroductory chapter Chapter 1. Common concepts and leading principles Chapter 2. Protection of property rights Chapter 3. Types of property rights: immovables and movables Chapter 4. Types of property rights: claims Chapter 5. Property rights as security interests Chapter 6. Management devices: trust, treuhand, fiducie Chapter 7. Creation Chapter 8. Transfer Chapter 9. Destruction Chapter 10. Uniform or harmonised property law TablesContributorsBram Akkermans (Maastricht University, NL) Monika HINTEREGGER (University of Graz, AU) Caroline LEBON (University of Leuven, BE) John Michael MILO (University of Utrecht, NL) Vincent SAGAERT (University of Leuven, University of Antwerp, BE) William SWADLING (University of Oxford, UK) Sjef VAN ERP (Maastricht University, NL) Lars VAN VLIET (University of Maastricht, NL) Assisted by Ton ROSEBOOM (Maastricht University) Advisory committeeMadeleine CANTIN CUMYN (McGill University, CA) Susan FRENCH (UCLA Law School, USA) Kenneth REID (Edinburgh University, UK)