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This book analyses transnational legal questions philosophically to show that the analytical structure and the techniques of private international law have their own legal and moral philosophical foundation.
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This book analyses transnational legal questions philosophically to show that the analytical structure and the techniques of private international law have their own legal and moral philosophical foundation.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. November 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 178mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 925g
- ISBN-13: 9780192858771
- ISBN-10: 0192858777
- Artikelnr.: 72004134
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. November 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 178mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 925g
- ISBN-13: 9780192858771
- ISBN-10: 0192858777
- Artikelnr.: 72004134
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Roxana Banu is an associate professor of law at Oxford University and a fellow and tutor in law at Lady Margaret Hall. Previously, she was a lecturer in law at Queen Mary University and an assistant professor at Western Ontario University Faculty of Law. She obtained her SJD degree from the University of Toronto Faculty of Law and her LL.M. magna cum laudae from Fordham Law School. Her research interests lie in private international law, legal history and theory, and feminist theory. She is currently researching on private international law's colonial history and on the social and gender history of cross-border maintenance conventions in the interwar period. Michael S. Green is the Woodbridge Professor of Law at William & Mary Law School. He holds a Ph.D. in Philosophy from Yale University and a J.D. from Yale Law School. Previously, he was a professor of law at George Mason Law School and an assistant professor of philosophy at Tufts University. He clerked for Judge Richard A. Posner on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. His research interests are in the philosophy of law, civil procedure, the conflict of laws, constitutional law, and continental philosophy (especially Nietzsche and Neo-Kantianism). Ralf Michaels is Director of the Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law in Hamburg, Germany, Chair in Global Law at Queen Mary University in London, and Professor of Law at Hamburg University. Michaels holds an LL.M. from Cambridge University and a PhD in Law from Passau University. His current research focuses on decolonial comparative law, regulatory conflict of laws, and theoretical foundations of private international law and global legal plurality. Michaels is a titular member of the Academia Europaea, the American Law Institute, the International Association of Comparative Law, and the Comparative Law Associations of the United States, Germany, and France.
* Introduction
* Part I Normative Structure
* 1: Florian Roedl: Necessary Unity
* 2: Sagi Peari: The Choice-Equality Foundation of Choice of Law: The
Restatement
* 3: David Dyzenhaus: Not an Isolated, Exceptional, and Indeed
Contradictory Branch of Jurisprudence
* 4: Kermit Roosevelt III: Against Choice of Law Exceptionalism
* 5: Giovanni Sartor, Antonino Rotolo: Logical Models for Private
International Law
* Part II Authority
* 6: Michael S. Green: Authority and Interest Analysis
* 7: Lea Brilmayer: Three Ethical Perspectives in American Choice of
Law
* 8: Alex Mills: Justifying and Challenging Territoriality in Private
International Law
* 9: Joanna Langille: Public Policy and the Rule of Law
* Part III Plurality
* 10: Nicole Roughan: Plurality of Laws and Conflict of Laws:
Reconciling Through Recognition?
* 11: Hans Lindahl: Conflict of Laws: Asymmetrical Recognition of the
Stranger (in Ourselves)
* 12: Ralf Michaels: Private International Law and the Legal Pluriverse
* 13: Horatia Muir Watt: Private International Law as 'Ligature':
Elements for a Post-Monist Jurisprudence
* Part IV Justice and Autonomy
* 14: Alejandro Aldo Menicocci: The Justice of Private International
Law: Equality and the Difference Principle
* 15: What Do We Owe to Each Other in Private International Law?: Moral
Contractualism and Transnational Justice Roxana Banu
* 16: A Relations-First Approach to Choice of Law Toni Marzal, George
Pavlakos
* 17: Party Autonomy and the Challenge of Choice of Law Perry Dane
* 18: Conflict of Laws and Global Governance Dai Yokomizo
* Part I Normative Structure
* 1: Florian Roedl: Necessary Unity
* 2: Sagi Peari: The Choice-Equality Foundation of Choice of Law: The
Restatement
* 3: David Dyzenhaus: Not an Isolated, Exceptional, and Indeed
Contradictory Branch of Jurisprudence
* 4: Kermit Roosevelt III: Against Choice of Law Exceptionalism
* 5: Giovanni Sartor, Antonino Rotolo: Logical Models for Private
International Law
* Part II Authority
* 6: Michael S. Green: Authority and Interest Analysis
* 7: Lea Brilmayer: Three Ethical Perspectives in American Choice of
Law
* 8: Alex Mills: Justifying and Challenging Territoriality in Private
International Law
* 9: Joanna Langille: Public Policy and the Rule of Law
* Part III Plurality
* 10: Nicole Roughan: Plurality of Laws and Conflict of Laws:
Reconciling Through Recognition?
* 11: Hans Lindahl: Conflict of Laws: Asymmetrical Recognition of the
Stranger (in Ourselves)
* 12: Ralf Michaels: Private International Law and the Legal Pluriverse
* 13: Horatia Muir Watt: Private International Law as 'Ligature':
Elements for a Post-Monist Jurisprudence
* Part IV Justice and Autonomy
* 14: Alejandro Aldo Menicocci: The Justice of Private International
Law: Equality and the Difference Principle
* 15: What Do We Owe to Each Other in Private International Law?: Moral
Contractualism and Transnational Justice Roxana Banu
* 16: A Relations-First Approach to Choice of Law Toni Marzal, George
Pavlakos
* 17: Party Autonomy and the Challenge of Choice of Law Perry Dane
* 18: Conflict of Laws and Global Governance Dai Yokomizo
* Introduction
* Part I Normative Structure
* 1: Florian Roedl: Necessary Unity
* 2: Sagi Peari: The Choice-Equality Foundation of Choice of Law: The
Restatement
* 3: David Dyzenhaus: Not an Isolated, Exceptional, and Indeed
Contradictory Branch of Jurisprudence
* 4: Kermit Roosevelt III: Against Choice of Law Exceptionalism
* 5: Giovanni Sartor, Antonino Rotolo: Logical Models for Private
International Law
* Part II Authority
* 6: Michael S. Green: Authority and Interest Analysis
* 7: Lea Brilmayer: Three Ethical Perspectives in American Choice of
Law
* 8: Alex Mills: Justifying and Challenging Territoriality in Private
International Law
* 9: Joanna Langille: Public Policy and the Rule of Law
* Part III Plurality
* 10: Nicole Roughan: Plurality of Laws and Conflict of Laws:
Reconciling Through Recognition?
* 11: Hans Lindahl: Conflict of Laws: Asymmetrical Recognition of the
Stranger (in Ourselves)
* 12: Ralf Michaels: Private International Law and the Legal Pluriverse
* 13: Horatia Muir Watt: Private International Law as 'Ligature':
Elements for a Post-Monist Jurisprudence
* Part IV Justice and Autonomy
* 14: Alejandro Aldo Menicocci: The Justice of Private International
Law: Equality and the Difference Principle
* 15: What Do We Owe to Each Other in Private International Law?: Moral
Contractualism and Transnational Justice Roxana Banu
* 16: A Relations-First Approach to Choice of Law Toni Marzal, George
Pavlakos
* 17: Party Autonomy and the Challenge of Choice of Law Perry Dane
* 18: Conflict of Laws and Global Governance Dai Yokomizo
* Part I Normative Structure
* 1: Florian Roedl: Necessary Unity
* 2: Sagi Peari: The Choice-Equality Foundation of Choice of Law: The
Restatement
* 3: David Dyzenhaus: Not an Isolated, Exceptional, and Indeed
Contradictory Branch of Jurisprudence
* 4: Kermit Roosevelt III: Against Choice of Law Exceptionalism
* 5: Giovanni Sartor, Antonino Rotolo: Logical Models for Private
International Law
* Part II Authority
* 6: Michael S. Green: Authority and Interest Analysis
* 7: Lea Brilmayer: Three Ethical Perspectives in American Choice of
Law
* 8: Alex Mills: Justifying and Challenging Territoriality in Private
International Law
* 9: Joanna Langille: Public Policy and the Rule of Law
* Part III Plurality
* 10: Nicole Roughan: Plurality of Laws and Conflict of Laws:
Reconciling Through Recognition?
* 11: Hans Lindahl: Conflict of Laws: Asymmetrical Recognition of the
Stranger (in Ourselves)
* 12: Ralf Michaels: Private International Law and the Legal Pluriverse
* 13: Horatia Muir Watt: Private International Law as 'Ligature':
Elements for a Post-Monist Jurisprudence
* Part IV Justice and Autonomy
* 14: Alejandro Aldo Menicocci: The Justice of Private International
Law: Equality and the Difference Principle
* 15: What Do We Owe to Each Other in Private International Law?: Moral
Contractualism and Transnational Justice Roxana Banu
* 16: A Relations-First Approach to Choice of Law Toni Marzal, George
Pavlakos
* 17: Party Autonomy and the Challenge of Choice of Law Perry Dane
* 18: Conflict of Laws and Global Governance Dai Yokomizo