EU civil justice : current issues and future outlook

Bibliographic Information

EU civil justice : current issues and future outlook

edited by Burkhard Hess, Maria Bergström and Eva Storskrubb

(Swedish studies in European law / edited by Nils Wahl and Per Cramér, v. 7)

Hart, 2016

  • : hardback

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Note

Includes papers presented at the conference "Civil Justice in the EU: Growing and Teething" held in 2013 in Uppsala organised by the Swedish Network for European Legal Studies (SNELS) in collaboration with the Max Planck Institute in Luxembourg for International, European and Regulatory Procedural Law, and Uppsala University

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This seventh volume in the Swedish Studies in European Law series brings together some of the most prominent scholars working within the fast-evolving field of EU civil justice. Civil justice has an impact on matters involving, inter alia, family relationships, consumers, entrepreneurs, employees, small and medium-sized businesses and large multinational corporations. It therefore has great power and potential. Over the past 15 years a wealth of EU measures have been enacted in this field. Issues arising from the implementation thereof and practice in relation to these measures are now emerging. Hence, this volume will explore the benefits as well as the challenges of these measures. The particular themes covered include forum shopping, alternative dispute resolution, simplified procedures and debt collection, family matters and collective redress. In addition, the deepening of the field that continues post-Lisbon has occasioned a new level of regulatory and policy challenges. These are discussed in the final part of the volume which focuses on mutual recognition also in the broader European law context of integration in the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice.

Table of Contents

1. The State of the Civil Justice Union Burkhard Hess Part I: Avoiding 'Torpedoes' and Forum Shopping 2. Lis Pendens and Jurisdiction Clauses: Open Issues Gilles Cuniberti Part II: Alternative Dispute Resolution 3. ADR/ODR: Too Much Optimism in the Promotion of Cross-Border Trade? Jim Davies 4. Top-Level Domains and ADR: What Protection of Consumer Interests Under ICANN's New gTLD Program? Cristina M Mariottini Part III: Simplified Procedures and Debt Collection: Much Ado About Nothing? 5. 'Trusted with a Muzzle and Enfranchised with a Clog': The British Approach to European Civil Procedure Carla Crifo 6. European Procedures on Debt Collection: Nothing or Noting? Experiences and Future Prospects Xandra E Kramer 7. The Small Claims Regulation: On the Way to an Improved European Procedure? Cristian Oro Martinez Part IV: Family Law 8. The Nordic Input on the EU's Cooperation in Family and Succession Law: Exporting Union Law Through 'Nordic Exceptions' Maarit Janter a -Jareborg 9. The European Certificate of Succession: Portrait of a New Instrument in European Private International Law Bjoern Laukemann Part V: Collective Redress 10. 'Opt-In is Out and Opt-Out is In' : Dimensions Based on Nordic Options and the Commission's Recommendation Laura Ervo 11. The Crux of the Matter: Funding and Financing Collective Redress Mechanisms Stefaan Voet 12. Legal Standing in Collective Redress Actions for Breach of EU Rights: Facilitating or Frustrating Common Standards and Access to Justice? Rebecca Money-Kyrle Part VI: The Quest for Mutual Recognition 13. Abolition of Exequatur , All in the Name of Mutual Trust! Marie Linton 14. On the Abolition of Exequatur Marta Requejo Isidro 15. Mutual Recognition as a Governance Strategy for Civil Justice Eva Storskrubb 16. Mutual Recognition in Civil and Criminal Justice: Towards Order and Method? Maria Bergstroem

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