"This is a big book, with big themes and an author with the necessary experience to back them up... Full of insights as to the theories that underlie the rules governing contract, property and security, it is an important contribution to the law of international commerce and finance." (Law Quarterly Review) Volume 1 of this new edition covers the roots and foundations of private law, the different origins, structure, and orientation of civil and common law, and the social and cultural forces behind it. It analyses the practical needs and market forces behind the emergence of a new transnational commercial and financial legal order, its international finance-driven impulses, concepts, and operation; the theoretical basis of the transnationalisation of the law in the professional sphere in that order; the autonomous sources of the new law merchant or modern lex mercatoria derived from the method of public international law, as well as its relationship to domestic and transnational public policy and public order requirements. The complete set in this magisterial work is made up of 6 volumes. Used independently, each volume allows the reader to delve into a particular topic. Alternatively, all volumes can be read together for a comprehensive overview of transnational comparative commercial, financial and trade law.



Autorentext

Jan H Dalhuisen is Professor of Law at King's College London and Chair in Transnational Financial Law at the Catholic University in Lisbon. He is Visiting Professor at the University of California at Berkeley and former Visiting Professor at the Tsinghua University in Beijing, the University of Hong Kong, the University of Singapore (NUS), Tel Aviv University, the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, and the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands.

Titel
Dalhuisen on Transnational and Comparative Commercial, Financial and Trade Law Volume 1
Untertitel
The Transnationalisation of Commercial and Financial Law. The New Lex Mercatoria and its Sources
EAN
9781509949205
Format
PDF
Veröffentlichung
21.04.2022
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
5.22 MB
Anzahl Seiten
464