Private international law at the end of the 20th century : progress or regress? : XVth International Congress of Comparative Law Le droit international privé à la fin du XXe siècle : progrès ou recul? : XVe Congrès international de droit comparé
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Bibliographic Information
Private international law at the end of the 20th century : progress or regress? : XVth International Congress of Comparative Law = Le droit international privé à la fin du XXe siècle : progrès ou recul? : XVe Congrès international de droit comparé
Kluwer Law International, 2000
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At head of title: Académie internationale de droit comparé = International Academy of Comparative Law
English and French
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This study provides a comparative assessment of the current state of Private International Law by exploring the fundamental philosophical, ideological, and methodological challenges encountered during the 20th century and the responses to those challenges in the western world. Among the questions discussed are: the dilemma between "conflicts justice" and "material justice"; the conflict between the goal of international uniformity and the need or desire to protect state or national interests; the tension between the goals of certainty and flexibility; the symbiosis of the multilateral, unilateral, and substantive methodologies; and the antagonism or co-existence between choice-of-law rules and flexible "approaches", and between "jurisdiction-selecting" and "content-oriented" rules or approaches. Providing insight and diverse perspectives from 19 countries, this book should be useful to teachers or students of private international law or comparative law.
Table of Contents
Private International Law at the end of the 20th Century. Progress or Regress? S. Symeonides.
by "Nielsen BookData"