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This tribute to Professor Arthur von Mehren from the Harvard Law School is a contribution to the evolving transatlantic dialogue on the conflict of laws. It contains ten contributions that discuss the problems conflict of laws is facing in a globalized world. The first five contributions deal with current legal topics in international civil litigation and transatlantic judicial co-operation ranging from the design of judgments conventions to the recently adopted Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements, and from problems involving negative declaratory actions in international disputes to…mehr
This tribute to Professor Arthur von Mehren from the Harvard Law School is a contribution to the evolving transatlantic dialogue on the conflict of laws. It contains ten contributions that discuss the problems conflict of laws is facing in a globalized world. The first five contributions deal with current legal topics in international civil litigation and transatlantic judicial co-operation ranging from the design of judgments conventions to the recently adopted Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements, and from problems involving negative declaratory actions in international disputes to recent transatlantic developments relating to service of process and collective proceedings. The remaining five contributions focus on choice of law in international relationships. They cover comparative and economic dimensions of party autonomy, reflect on discussions in the choice of law relating to intellectual property rights, and critically discuss the applicable law in antitrust law litigation, international arbitration, and actions for punitive damages.
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Autorenporträt
Eckart Gottschalk is an associate with CMS Hasche Sigle in Hamburg specializing on corporate and commercial law. Before he started practising, he served as a Joseph Storu Research Fellow at Harvard Law School and as a senior research fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law in Hamburg, Germany. He is the author of a book about pervasive problems in private international law treaties and has published numerous law review articles on German, European and US business law, comparative law, and private international law. He holds both German State Examinations, a Master of Laws from the University of California, Berkeley, and a Ph.D. from the University of Gottingen (Germany). Ralf Michaels is Associate Professor at the Duke University Law School in Durham, North Carolina. Prior to joining the Duke faculty, he was a senior research fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law in Hamburg, Germany. He also served as the Joseph Story Research Fellow at Harvard Law School. Michaels is the author of a book on the connections between sales contracts and the passing of ownership. He is the co-editor of a forthcoming volume on the return of the private in private international law. He holds German state examinations and a Ph.D. from the University of Passau (Germany), as well as a Master of law from King's College, Cambridge where he received the C. J. Hamson Prize in Comparative Law. He is a member of the editorial boards at the American Academy in Berlin. Gisela Rühl is Senior Research Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law in Hamburg, Germany, Lecturer of Law at the University of Hamburg and at the Humboldt University Berlin. Before she joined the Max Planck Institute she held the position of the Joseph Story Research Fellow at Harvard Law School. She is the author of a book abou the harmonization of insurance contract law in Europe and has published a number of law review articles on comparative law and conflict of laws in Germany, England, and the United States. Her research at the Max Planck Institute focuses on comparative and economic analysis of conflict of laws. She holds both German State Examinations, a Master of Laws from the University of California, Berkeley, and a Ph.D. from the University of Hamburg. Her dissertation was awarded the Otto-Hahn Medal for Outstanding Scientific Achievements by the Max Planck Society, Munich. She is a member of the editorial board of the German Law Journal. Jan von Hein is a senior research fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law in Hamburg, Germany. His research at the Institute focuses on private international law and European corporate law. He holds both German State Examinations, and Ph.D. from the University of Hamburg. He served as the Joseph Story Research Fellow at Harvard Law School. Von Hein is the author of a book about determining the law applicable to transnational torts that was honored with the Otto-Hahn Medal for Outstanding Scientific Achievements by the Max Planck Society, Munich. He has published numerous law review articles, mainly on private international law, corporate law, and civil procedure. He has taught private international law at the Universities of Hamburg and Osnabruck and is currently teaching conflict of laws and comparative law at the University of Greifswald.
Inhaltsangabe
Editor's preface; Bibliographical note; Part I. Remembering Arthur T. von Mehren: 1. The last Euro-American legal scholar? Arthur Taylor von Mehren (1922-2006) Jürgen Basedow; 2. Arthur Taylor von Mehren and the Joseph Story Research Fellowship Peter L. Murray; 3. Building bridges between legal systems - the life and work of Arthur T. von Mehren Michael von Hinden; Part II. Transatlantic Litigation and Judicial Cooperation in Civil and Commercial Matters: 4. Some fundamental jurisdictional conceptions as applied in judgement conventions Ralf Michaels; 5. The Hague Convention on Choice-of-Court Agreements - was it worth the effort? Christian Thiele; 6. Lis Pendens, negative declaratory-judgement actions and the first-in-time principle Martin Gebauer; 7. Recent German jurisprudence on cooperation with the US in civil and commercial matters: a defense of sovereignty or judicial protectionism? Jan von Hein; 8. Collective litigation German style - the act on model proceedings in capital market disputes Moritz Balz and Feliz Blobel; Part III. Choice of Law in Transatlantic Relationships: 9. Party autonomy in the private international law of contracts: transatlantic convergence and economic efficiency Gisela Ruhl; 10. The law applicable to intellectual property rights: is the Lex Loci Protectionis a pertinent choice of law approach? Eckart Gottschalk; 11. The extraterritorial reach of antitrust law between legal imperialism and harmonious co-existence: the empagram judgement of the US Supreme Court from a European perpective Dietmar Baetge; 12. Mandatory elements of the Choice-of-Law Process in international arbitration - some reflections on Teubnerian and Kelsenian legal theory Matthias Weller; 13. Application of foreign law to determine punitive damages - a recent US Court contribution to Choice-of-Law evolution Oliver Furtak.
Editor's preface; Bibliographical note; Part I. Remembering Arthur T. von Mehren: 1. The last Euro-American legal scholar? Arthur Taylor von Mehren (1922-2006) Jürgen Basedow; 2. Arthur Taylor von Mehren and the Joseph Story Research Fellowship Peter L. Murray; 3. Building bridges between legal systems - the life and work of Arthur T. von Mehren Michael von Hinden; Part II. Transatlantic Litigation and Judicial Cooperation in Civil and Commercial Matters: 4. Some fundamental jurisdictional conceptions as applied in judgement conventions Ralf Michaels; 5. The Hague Convention on Choice-of-Court Agreements - was it worth the effort? Christian Thiele; 6. Lis Pendens, negative declaratory-judgement actions and the first-in-time principle Martin Gebauer; 7. Recent German jurisprudence on cooperation with the US in civil and commercial matters: a defense of sovereignty or judicial protectionism? Jan von Hein; 8. Collective litigation German style - the act on model proceedings in capital market disputes Moritz Balz and Feliz Blobel; Part III. Choice of Law in Transatlantic Relationships: 9. Party autonomy in the private international law of contracts: transatlantic convergence and economic efficiency Gisela Ruhl; 10. The law applicable to intellectual property rights: is the Lex Loci Protectionis a pertinent choice of law approach? Eckart Gottschalk; 11. The extraterritorial reach of antitrust law between legal imperialism and harmonious co-existence: the empagram judgement of the US Supreme Court from a European perpective Dietmar Baetge; 12. Mandatory elements of the Choice-of-Law Process in international arbitration - some reflections on Teubnerian and Kelsenian legal theory Matthias Weller; 13. Application of foreign law to determine punitive damages - a recent US Court contribution to Choice-of-Law evolution Oliver Furtak.
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