Delivering Justice
A Holistic and Multidisciplinary Approach
Herausgeber: Kramer, Xandra; Hess, Burkhard; Tulibacka, Magdalena; Ködderitzsch, Lorenz; Voet, Stefaan
Delivering Justice
A Holistic and Multidisciplinary Approach
Herausgeber: Kramer, Xandra; Hess, Burkhard; Tulibacka, Magdalena; Ködderitzsch, Lorenz; Voet, Stefaan
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"In this Liber Amicorum, leading experts and old-time friends from around the world come together to pay tribute to Christopher Hodges' multifaceted career and work by exploring what can be done to deliver justice and fairness, focusing on collective redress, consumer dispute resolution, court system reform, ethical business regulation and regulatory delivery. After a decade-long career as a solicitor, Christopher Hodges became Professor of Justice Systems at the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies at the University of Oxford. Throughout his academic career he worked on a variety of topics dealing…mehr
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"In this Liber Amicorum, leading experts and old-time friends from around the world come together to pay tribute to Christopher Hodges' multifaceted career and work by exploring what can be done to deliver justice and fairness, focusing on collective redress, consumer dispute resolution, court system reform, ethical business regulation and regulatory delivery. After a decade-long career as a solicitor, Christopher Hodges became Professor of Justice Systems at the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies at the University of Oxford. Throughout his academic career he worked on a variety of topics dealing with access to justice and dispute resolution: from product liability, procedural/funding systems and collective redress, to alternative dispute resolution and ethical business regulation. In 2021 Christopher Hodges was awarded an OBE for services to business and law. His ground-breaking research not only inspired students and colleagues, but also influenced policymakers worldwide. Delivering justice, and "making things better", runs like a thread through his work; the same thread connects the chapters in this book."
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Seitenzahl: 344
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Dezember 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 668g
- ISBN-13: 9781509961542
- ISBN-10: 1509961542
- Artikelnr.: 66877186
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Seitenzahl: 344
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Dezember 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 668g
- ISBN-13: 9781509961542
- ISBN-10: 1509961542
- Artikelnr.: 66877186
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Xandra Kramer is Professor of Private Law and European Civil Procedure at Erasmus University Rotterdam and Professor of Private International Law at Utrecht University, the Netherlands. Stefaan Voet is Professor of Law the Faculty of Law, KU Leuven, Belgium. Lorenz Ködderitzsch is Assistant General Counsel at the Law Department EMEA, Johnson & Johnson, Belgium. Magdalena Tulibacka is Faculty Lecturer at Emory Law School Atlanta, Georgia, USA. Burkhard Hess is Director of the Max Planck Institute for Procedural Law, Luxembourg.
Part One: Homage to a Polymath 1. The Multidimensional Career of a Polymath
Xandra Kramer (Erasmus University Rotterdam
the Netherlands) Stefaan Voet (KU Leuven
Belgium)
Lorenz Ködderitzsch (Johnson & Johnson
Belgium)
Magdalena Tulibacka (Emory Law School
USA) and Burkhard Hess (Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for Procedural Law) 2. Resume and Main Publications
Xandra Kramer (Erasmus University Rotterdam
the Netherlands) Stefaan Voet (KU Leuven
Belgium)
Lorenz Ködderitzsch (Johnson & Johnson
Belgium)
Magdalena Tulibacka (Emory Law School
USA) and Burkhard Hess (Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for Procedural Law) 3. The Friend
David Marks (CMS Cameron McKenna
United Kingdom) 4. Policy Behaviour: Forging the Blueprint
Arundel McDougall (European Justice Forum
Belgium) and Urs Leimbacher (Swiss Re
Switzerland) 5. A Love of Music: From Oxford to the Sixteen
Harry Christophers CBE (The Sixteen
United Kingdom) 6. 'In Modern Comic Opera One Sometimes Has to Wing It. If It's Too Absurd to Say It
Then Sing It!'
Jeremy Gray (Bampton Classical Opera
United Kingdom) 7. Solicitor
Academic
Policymaker!
Diana Wallis (former European Parliament
Belgium) Part Two: Collective Redress 8. What is Collective in EU Collective Redress?
Hans Micklitz (European University Institute
Italy) and Andrea Wechsler (Pforzheim University
Germany) 9. 'Je t'aime
moi non plus': Why Europe Needs Strong Collective Redress
Alexandre Biard (Erasmus School of Law
the Netherlands) 10. Collective Redress in EU Consumer Law - How It Is
How It Could Be
Stephen Weatherill (University of Oxford
United Kingdom) 11. Let's Redress European Redress the Hodges Way! Redressons redress en Europe à l'Hodgienne! A Look at How Canada Resolves the Conflicting Collective Claims Cross-Border Conundrum and How May the Canadian Solution Help Us in the EU?
Herbert Woopen (European Justice Forum
Belgium) 12. Deadweight Loss and Collective Redress in Competition Law
Franziska Weber (Erasmus School of Law
the Netherlands) 13. Third Party Funding in Collective Redress
Astrid Stadler (University of Konstanz
Germany) 14. Do Collective Redress Mechanisms Deliver Justice?
Mary Bartkus (Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP
US) Part Three: Consumer Dispute Resolution 15. Does ADR "Get It"?
Lewis Shand Smith (Business Banking Resolution Service
United Kingdom) and Matt Vickers (Ombudsman Services
United Kingdom) 16. Consumer Dispute Resolution in the Digital Era: Access for Some Consumers?
Eline Verhage (Leiden University
the Netherlands) and Naomi Creutzfeldt (University of Westminster
United Kingdom) 17. Rise and Fall of Traffic Accident ADR in Japan: The Cause and the Possible Remedy
Takuya Hatta (Kobe University
Japan) 18. CDR: Catalyst for China's E-Commerce
Ying Yu (University of Oxford
United Kingdom) and Alex Chung (University College London
United Kingdom) Part Four: Court System Reform and New Technologies 19. Digital Technology and The Development of Holistic Dispute Resolution
Sir Geoffrey Vos (Master of the Rolls
United Kingdom) and John Sorabji (UCL
United Kingdom) 20. The Evolution of No-Fault Compensation Schemes for Personal Injuries
Sonia Macleod (University of Oxford
United Kingdom) 21. No-Fault Compensation Systems in the Pandemic Context
Lorenz Ködderitzsch (Johnson & Johnson
Belgium) Part Five: Ethical Business Regulation
Corporate Behaviour
and Regulatory Delivery 22. Ethical Business Practice and Regulation and Beyond: Challenging Traditional Approaches to Compliance and Enforcement
Ruth Steinholtz (AretéWork
United Kingdom) and Srikanth Managalam (University of Queensland
Australia) 23. The Evolution of INDR 2017 - 2022
Hilary Evans (INDR
United Kingdom) and Graham Russell
Departments for Business
Energy and Industrial Strategy
United Kingdom)
Xandra Kramer (Erasmus University Rotterdam
the Netherlands) Stefaan Voet (KU Leuven
Belgium)
Lorenz Ködderitzsch (Johnson & Johnson
Belgium)
Magdalena Tulibacka (Emory Law School
USA) and Burkhard Hess (Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for Procedural Law) 2. Resume and Main Publications
Xandra Kramer (Erasmus University Rotterdam
the Netherlands) Stefaan Voet (KU Leuven
Belgium)
Lorenz Ködderitzsch (Johnson & Johnson
Belgium)
Magdalena Tulibacka (Emory Law School
USA) and Burkhard Hess (Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for Procedural Law) 3. The Friend
David Marks (CMS Cameron McKenna
United Kingdom) 4. Policy Behaviour: Forging the Blueprint
Arundel McDougall (European Justice Forum
Belgium) and Urs Leimbacher (Swiss Re
Switzerland) 5. A Love of Music: From Oxford to the Sixteen
Harry Christophers CBE (The Sixteen
United Kingdom) 6. 'In Modern Comic Opera One Sometimes Has to Wing It. If It's Too Absurd to Say It
Then Sing It!'
Jeremy Gray (Bampton Classical Opera
United Kingdom) 7. Solicitor
Academic
Policymaker!
Diana Wallis (former European Parliament
Belgium) Part Two: Collective Redress 8. What is Collective in EU Collective Redress?
Hans Micklitz (European University Institute
Italy) and Andrea Wechsler (Pforzheim University
Germany) 9. 'Je t'aime
moi non plus': Why Europe Needs Strong Collective Redress
Alexandre Biard (Erasmus School of Law
the Netherlands) 10. Collective Redress in EU Consumer Law - How It Is
How It Could Be
Stephen Weatherill (University of Oxford
United Kingdom) 11. Let's Redress European Redress the Hodges Way! Redressons redress en Europe à l'Hodgienne! A Look at How Canada Resolves the Conflicting Collective Claims Cross-Border Conundrum and How May the Canadian Solution Help Us in the EU?
Herbert Woopen (European Justice Forum
Belgium) 12. Deadweight Loss and Collective Redress in Competition Law
Franziska Weber (Erasmus School of Law
the Netherlands) 13. Third Party Funding in Collective Redress
Astrid Stadler (University of Konstanz
Germany) 14. Do Collective Redress Mechanisms Deliver Justice?
Mary Bartkus (Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP
US) Part Three: Consumer Dispute Resolution 15. Does ADR "Get It"?
Lewis Shand Smith (Business Banking Resolution Service
United Kingdom) and Matt Vickers (Ombudsman Services
United Kingdom) 16. Consumer Dispute Resolution in the Digital Era: Access for Some Consumers?
Eline Verhage (Leiden University
the Netherlands) and Naomi Creutzfeldt (University of Westminster
United Kingdom) 17. Rise and Fall of Traffic Accident ADR in Japan: The Cause and the Possible Remedy
Takuya Hatta (Kobe University
Japan) 18. CDR: Catalyst for China's E-Commerce
Ying Yu (University of Oxford
United Kingdom) and Alex Chung (University College London
United Kingdom) Part Four: Court System Reform and New Technologies 19. Digital Technology and The Development of Holistic Dispute Resolution
Sir Geoffrey Vos (Master of the Rolls
United Kingdom) and John Sorabji (UCL
United Kingdom) 20. The Evolution of No-Fault Compensation Schemes for Personal Injuries
Sonia Macleod (University of Oxford
United Kingdom) 21. No-Fault Compensation Systems in the Pandemic Context
Lorenz Ködderitzsch (Johnson & Johnson
Belgium) Part Five: Ethical Business Regulation
Corporate Behaviour
and Regulatory Delivery 22. Ethical Business Practice and Regulation and Beyond: Challenging Traditional Approaches to Compliance and Enforcement
Ruth Steinholtz (AretéWork
United Kingdom) and Srikanth Managalam (University of Queensland
Australia) 23. The Evolution of INDR 2017 - 2022
Hilary Evans (INDR
United Kingdom) and Graham Russell
Departments for Business
Energy and Industrial Strategy
United Kingdom)
Part One: Homage to a Polymath 1. The Multidimensional Career of a Polymath
Xandra Kramer (Erasmus University Rotterdam
the Netherlands) Stefaan Voet (KU Leuven
Belgium)
Lorenz Ködderitzsch (Johnson & Johnson
Belgium)
Magdalena Tulibacka (Emory Law School
USA) and Burkhard Hess (Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for Procedural Law) 2. Resume and Main Publications
Xandra Kramer (Erasmus University Rotterdam
the Netherlands) Stefaan Voet (KU Leuven
Belgium)
Lorenz Ködderitzsch (Johnson & Johnson
Belgium)
Magdalena Tulibacka (Emory Law School
USA) and Burkhard Hess (Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for Procedural Law) 3. The Friend
David Marks (CMS Cameron McKenna
United Kingdom) 4. Policy Behaviour: Forging the Blueprint
Arundel McDougall (European Justice Forum
Belgium) and Urs Leimbacher (Swiss Re
Switzerland) 5. A Love of Music: From Oxford to the Sixteen
Harry Christophers CBE (The Sixteen
United Kingdom) 6. 'In Modern Comic Opera One Sometimes Has to Wing It. If It's Too Absurd to Say It
Then Sing It!'
Jeremy Gray (Bampton Classical Opera
United Kingdom) 7. Solicitor
Academic
Policymaker!
Diana Wallis (former European Parliament
Belgium) Part Two: Collective Redress 8. What is Collective in EU Collective Redress?
Hans Micklitz (European University Institute
Italy) and Andrea Wechsler (Pforzheim University
Germany) 9. 'Je t'aime
moi non plus': Why Europe Needs Strong Collective Redress
Alexandre Biard (Erasmus School of Law
the Netherlands) 10. Collective Redress in EU Consumer Law - How It Is
How It Could Be
Stephen Weatherill (University of Oxford
United Kingdom) 11. Let's Redress European Redress the Hodges Way! Redressons redress en Europe à l'Hodgienne! A Look at How Canada Resolves the Conflicting Collective Claims Cross-Border Conundrum and How May the Canadian Solution Help Us in the EU?
Herbert Woopen (European Justice Forum
Belgium) 12. Deadweight Loss and Collective Redress in Competition Law
Franziska Weber (Erasmus School of Law
the Netherlands) 13. Third Party Funding in Collective Redress
Astrid Stadler (University of Konstanz
Germany) 14. Do Collective Redress Mechanisms Deliver Justice?
Mary Bartkus (Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP
US) Part Three: Consumer Dispute Resolution 15. Does ADR "Get It"?
Lewis Shand Smith (Business Banking Resolution Service
United Kingdom) and Matt Vickers (Ombudsman Services
United Kingdom) 16. Consumer Dispute Resolution in the Digital Era: Access for Some Consumers?
Eline Verhage (Leiden University
the Netherlands) and Naomi Creutzfeldt (University of Westminster
United Kingdom) 17. Rise and Fall of Traffic Accident ADR in Japan: The Cause and the Possible Remedy
Takuya Hatta (Kobe University
Japan) 18. CDR: Catalyst for China's E-Commerce
Ying Yu (University of Oxford
United Kingdom) and Alex Chung (University College London
United Kingdom) Part Four: Court System Reform and New Technologies 19. Digital Technology and The Development of Holistic Dispute Resolution
Sir Geoffrey Vos (Master of the Rolls
United Kingdom) and John Sorabji (UCL
United Kingdom) 20. The Evolution of No-Fault Compensation Schemes for Personal Injuries
Sonia Macleod (University of Oxford
United Kingdom) 21. No-Fault Compensation Systems in the Pandemic Context
Lorenz Ködderitzsch (Johnson & Johnson
Belgium) Part Five: Ethical Business Regulation
Corporate Behaviour
and Regulatory Delivery 22. Ethical Business Practice and Regulation and Beyond: Challenging Traditional Approaches to Compliance and Enforcement
Ruth Steinholtz (AretéWork
United Kingdom) and Srikanth Managalam (University of Queensland
Australia) 23. The Evolution of INDR 2017 - 2022
Hilary Evans (INDR
United Kingdom) and Graham Russell
Departments for Business
Energy and Industrial Strategy
United Kingdom)
Xandra Kramer (Erasmus University Rotterdam
the Netherlands) Stefaan Voet (KU Leuven
Belgium)
Lorenz Ködderitzsch (Johnson & Johnson
Belgium)
Magdalena Tulibacka (Emory Law School
USA) and Burkhard Hess (Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for Procedural Law) 2. Resume and Main Publications
Xandra Kramer (Erasmus University Rotterdam
the Netherlands) Stefaan Voet (KU Leuven
Belgium)
Lorenz Ködderitzsch (Johnson & Johnson
Belgium)
Magdalena Tulibacka (Emory Law School
USA) and Burkhard Hess (Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for Procedural Law) 3. The Friend
David Marks (CMS Cameron McKenna
United Kingdom) 4. Policy Behaviour: Forging the Blueprint
Arundel McDougall (European Justice Forum
Belgium) and Urs Leimbacher (Swiss Re
Switzerland) 5. A Love of Music: From Oxford to the Sixteen
Harry Christophers CBE (The Sixteen
United Kingdom) 6. 'In Modern Comic Opera One Sometimes Has to Wing It. If It's Too Absurd to Say It
Then Sing It!'
Jeremy Gray (Bampton Classical Opera
United Kingdom) 7. Solicitor
Academic
Policymaker!
Diana Wallis (former European Parliament
Belgium) Part Two: Collective Redress 8. What is Collective in EU Collective Redress?
Hans Micklitz (European University Institute
Italy) and Andrea Wechsler (Pforzheim University
Germany) 9. 'Je t'aime
moi non plus': Why Europe Needs Strong Collective Redress
Alexandre Biard (Erasmus School of Law
the Netherlands) 10. Collective Redress in EU Consumer Law - How It Is
How It Could Be
Stephen Weatherill (University of Oxford
United Kingdom) 11. Let's Redress European Redress the Hodges Way! Redressons redress en Europe à l'Hodgienne! A Look at How Canada Resolves the Conflicting Collective Claims Cross-Border Conundrum and How May the Canadian Solution Help Us in the EU?
Herbert Woopen (European Justice Forum
Belgium) 12. Deadweight Loss and Collective Redress in Competition Law
Franziska Weber (Erasmus School of Law
the Netherlands) 13. Third Party Funding in Collective Redress
Astrid Stadler (University of Konstanz
Germany) 14. Do Collective Redress Mechanisms Deliver Justice?
Mary Bartkus (Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP
US) Part Three: Consumer Dispute Resolution 15. Does ADR "Get It"?
Lewis Shand Smith (Business Banking Resolution Service
United Kingdom) and Matt Vickers (Ombudsman Services
United Kingdom) 16. Consumer Dispute Resolution in the Digital Era: Access for Some Consumers?
Eline Verhage (Leiden University
the Netherlands) and Naomi Creutzfeldt (University of Westminster
United Kingdom) 17. Rise and Fall of Traffic Accident ADR in Japan: The Cause and the Possible Remedy
Takuya Hatta (Kobe University
Japan) 18. CDR: Catalyst for China's E-Commerce
Ying Yu (University of Oxford
United Kingdom) and Alex Chung (University College London
United Kingdom) Part Four: Court System Reform and New Technologies 19. Digital Technology and The Development of Holistic Dispute Resolution
Sir Geoffrey Vos (Master of the Rolls
United Kingdom) and John Sorabji (UCL
United Kingdom) 20. The Evolution of No-Fault Compensation Schemes for Personal Injuries
Sonia Macleod (University of Oxford
United Kingdom) 21. No-Fault Compensation Systems in the Pandemic Context
Lorenz Ködderitzsch (Johnson & Johnson
Belgium) Part Five: Ethical Business Regulation
Corporate Behaviour
and Regulatory Delivery 22. Ethical Business Practice and Regulation and Beyond: Challenging Traditional Approaches to Compliance and Enforcement
Ruth Steinholtz (AretéWork
United Kingdom) and Srikanth Managalam (University of Queensland
Australia) 23. The Evolution of INDR 2017 - 2022
Hilary Evans (INDR
United Kingdom) and Graham Russell
Departments for Business
Energy and Industrial Strategy
United Kingdom)