Private International Law Online: Internet Regulation and Civil Liability in the EU: Oxford Private International Law Series
Autor Tobias Lutzien Limba Engleză Hardback – iul 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198865261
ISBN-10: 0198865260
Pagini: 260
Dimensiuni: 177 x 249 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford Private International Law Series
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198865260
Pagini: 260
Dimensiuni: 177 x 249 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford Private International Law Series
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
A book worth reading, based on a dissertation. Its scope is wide, the collection of sources is highly international...and the editing in Oxford has been done well and should greatly help the adoption of the work in the English-speaking world and on the continent. A welcome contribution to the regulation of harmful attacks on private rights from the internet.
The book thus proposes a restoration of private international law in the area of the law of obligations that are specific to online activities, and more precisely, of the civil liability that the latter entail. ... The specific point of equilibrium found by the author may be debatable but the proposition of Mr. Lutzi strives to be balanced, reasonable, and comprehensive, in line with the best tradition of the discipline. [Translated]
The thoughtful and highly analytical Oxford dissertation [...] critically discusses the relevant jurisprudence of the CJEU and comprehensively analyses the relevant norms on international jurisdiction and the conflict of laws in tort and contract. [Translated]
Dr Lutzi has risen to the challenge impressively. His book is clear, cogent, closely argued and rigorously worked through. His willingness to test his arguments and proposals by acknowledging and addressing the strongest counter-arguments is especially striking ... [A]t a time when there is a noticeable tendency for nation States to assert the superiority of their national laws and abandon jurisdictional self-restraint, Dr Lutzi's book is an excellent contribution that deserves to ignite greater interest in the online role of PIL.
A better understanding and application of private international law can decisively contribute to remedy certain deficiencies in the enforcement of national legal orders and EU law to cross-border online activities. In this context, the valuable contribution that this well-researched book by Tobias Lutzi represents can hardly be overestimated ... In a nutshell, the book provides an excellent analysis of the regulatory potential of private international law to address the challenges posed by cross-border online activities. It also proposes a specific model to reduce fragmentation of jurisdiction and applicable law that should be taken into consideration in future discussions on the evolution of EU private international law.
Overall, Tobias Lutzi's book successfully combines complex theoretical analysis with concrete propositions in a multifaceted and developing area of the law. It exemplifies the contribution of private international law in addressing the challenges arising in information services: in doing so, it illustrates how policies and political aims may be promoted via private international law. As such, his book is an essential and highly recommended reading for academics, regulators, and practitioners.
The book thus proposes a restoration of private international law in the area of the law of obligations that are specific to online activities, and more precisely, of the civil liability that the latter entail. ... The specific point of equilibrium found by the author may be debatable but the proposition of Mr. Lutzi strives to be balanced, reasonable, and comprehensive, in line with the best tradition of the discipline. [Translated]
The thoughtful and highly analytical Oxford dissertation [...] critically discusses the relevant jurisprudence of the CJEU and comprehensively analyses the relevant norms on international jurisdiction and the conflict of laws in tort and contract. [Translated]
Dr Lutzi has risen to the challenge impressively. His book is clear, cogent, closely argued and rigorously worked through. His willingness to test his arguments and proposals by acknowledging and addressing the strongest counter-arguments is especially striking ... [A]t a time when there is a noticeable tendency for nation States to assert the superiority of their national laws and abandon jurisdictional self-restraint, Dr Lutzi's book is an excellent contribution that deserves to ignite greater interest in the online role of PIL.
A better understanding and application of private international law can decisively contribute to remedy certain deficiencies in the enforcement of national legal orders and EU law to cross-border online activities. In this context, the valuable contribution that this well-researched book by Tobias Lutzi represents can hardly be overestimated ... In a nutshell, the book provides an excellent analysis of the regulatory potential of private international law to address the challenges posed by cross-border online activities. It also proposes a specific model to reduce fragmentation of jurisdiction and applicable law that should be taken into consideration in future discussions on the evolution of EU private international law.
Overall, Tobias Lutzi's book successfully combines complex theoretical analysis with concrete propositions in a multifaceted and developing area of the law. It exemplifies the contribution of private international law in addressing the challenges arising in information services: in doing so, it illustrates how policies and political aims may be promoted via private international law. As such, his book is an essential and highly recommended reading for academics, regulators, and practitioners.
Notă biografică
Tobias Lutzi is a Research Fellow at the Institute for Private International and Comparative Law at the University of Cologne. In December 2019 he won the 2019 ICC Institute Prize for his thesis, titled "Regulating the Internet through Private International Law".