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Global Private International Law is a groundbreaking casebook, combining the expertise of over sixty international and interdisciplinary contributors who analyze key legal proceedings in order to provide a comprehensive study of the impact of globalisation on the law.Providing a unique and clearly structured tool, this book presents an authoritative collection of carefully selected global case studies. Some of these are considered global due to their internationally relevant subject matter, whilst others demonstrate the blurring of traditional legal categories in an age of accelerated cross-border movement. The study of the selected cases in their political, cultural, social and economic contexts sheds light on the contemporary transformation of law through its encounter with conflicting forms of normativity and the multiplication of potential fora.Key Features:the specific global scope allows the reader to gain a contextualised understanding of legal transformationeach case has two commentaries from different viewpoints, ensuring a nuanced perspective on the implications of the global turn in private international law and its importance for adjudicationan astute combination of theory and practice ensures readers gain an understanding of the relevance of innovative legal theories in interpreting concrete cases in a changing worldcomparative material and ground-breaking analysis make this book eminently suitable for use with students and a useful tool for researchers and courts confronted with novel topics or issues.
Edited by Horatia Muir Watt, Professor of Law, SciencesPo, Paris, France, Lucia Bíziková, Trainee in an international law firm, London, UK, Agatha Brandão de Oliveira, Guest Lecturer, Federal University of Espirito Santo (UFES), Brazil and member of the Brazilian Bar and Diego P. Fernández Arroyo, Professor of Law, Director of the LLM in Transnational & Dispute Settlement, SciencesPo Law School, Paris, France
Contents:IntroductionPart I Jurisdiction: Judging without Frontiers?1. Post-war yearning for deparochialisation and the siren of free trade: The Bremen v. Zapata Off-Shore Co.Jacco Bomhoff, Agatha Brandão de Oliveira and Lucia Bíziková2. Judicial discretion (From Bhopal to Brexit): Owusu v. JacksonChristelle Chalas and Richard Fentiman3. Parallel proceedings: Texaco/Chevron lawsuits (re Ecuador)Diego P. Fernández Arroyo qnd Laura Carballo Piñeiro4. Free-wheeling judgments/awards: Mitsubishi Motors Corp. v. Soler Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.George A. Bermann and Giuditta Cordero-Moss5. By-passing sovereignty: Trafigura lawsuits (re Ivory Coast)Sara Dezalay and Simon ArcherPart II The Rise of Informality: Emerging Non-legal Normativities6. Indigenous norms and judicial anthropologySong Mao, Alex Mills, Hisashi Harata and Oona Le Meur7. Non-state authority: FIFAFranck Latty8. Informal Codes: Nike v KaskyRalf Michaels and Ludovic Hennebel9. Arbitration and religion: Jivraj v HashwaniFrançois-Xavier Licari, Sandrine Brachotte and Nathalie NajjarPart III Changing Structures: New Foundations of the Private Global Economy10. Emerging global giants: the legal infrastructure and structural causes of economic monopoly: SamsungDarren Rosenblum, Calixto Salomão Filho and Vitor Henrique Pinto Ido11. Global supply chains: Doe v. NestleTomaso Ferrando and Samuel Fulli-Lemaire12. Global market for sovereign debt: Argentina v. NML Capital, Ltd.Jerôme Sgard and Mark Weidemaier13. Autotomizing financial markets: Lehman Brothers v. BNY Corporate TrusteeHoratia Muir WattPart IV Modes of Reasoning: Doing Law beyond the State14. Mysteries of extraterritoriality: RJR Nabisco, Inc. v European CommunityHannah Buxbaum and Jean d’Aspremont15. Beyond the State: How far can Rights Reach?: Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum CoPatrick Kinsch, Chris Thomale and Fabien Marchadier16. Interpretation at cross-purposes: Dallah v. PakistanHayk Kupelyants and Sylvain Bollée 17. Economic transplants : Lafonta v. Autorité des marchés financiersKatja Langenbucher and Toni Marzal18. Mestizo International Law: Petrobras sagaFilipe Antunes Madeira da Silva, Fabio Costa Morosini and Michelle Sanchez Badin19. Legal challenges of data dominance: Yahoo! v. LICRA and Microssoft - Ireland CasesPaul Schiff Berman and Jennifer DaskalPart V Global market: Unfamiliar foci of concern20. Global contract governance: Selden v. AirbnbDavid Restrepo-Amariles and Gregory Lewkowicz21. Free movement of corporations: Centros Ltd. v. Erhvervs-og SelskabsstyrelsenJeremy Heymann and Régis Bismuth22. Financial markets: Banco Santander v Transport CompaniesCatalina Avasilencei and Gilles Cuniberti23. Global labour market: LavalUglješa Grušić and Etienne PatautPart VI Personhood: Changing identities24. Surrogacy issues: Mennesson v. FranceKellen Trilha and Dagmar Coester-Waltjen25. Blind spots (persons and family): BloodElsa Supiot and Michael Wells-Greco26. Cultural identities: Wagner v. LuxembourgHans Van Loon and David Sindres27. Privatisation of international migration flows: Manus Island class actionSabine Corneloup and Jinske VerhellenIndex