Collective Actions in Europe
This open access book offers an analytical presentation of how Europe has created its own version of collective actions. In the last three decades, Europe has seen a remarkable proliferation of collective action legislation, making class actions the most successful export product of the American legal scholarship. While its spread has been surrounded by distrust and suspiciousness, today more than half of the EU Member States have introduced collective actions for damages and from those who did, more than half chose, to some extent, the opt-out system. This book demonstrates why collective actions have been felt needed from the perspective of access to justice and effectiveness of law, the European debate and the deep layers of the European reaction and resistance, revealing how the Copernican turn of class actions questions the fundamentals of the European thinking about market and public interest. Using a transsystemic presentation of the European national models, it analyzes the way collective actions were accommodated with the European regulatory environment, the novel and peculiar regulatory questions they had to address and how and why they work differently on this side of the Atlantic.This open access book offers an analytical presentation of how Europe has created its own version of collective actions. In the last three decades, Europe has seen a remarkable proliferation of collective action legislation, making class actions the most successful export product of the American legal scholarship. While its spread has been surrounded by distrust and suspiciousness, today more than half of the EU Member States have introduced collective actions for damages and from those who did, more than half chose, to some extent, the opt-out system. This book demonstrates why collective actions have been felt needed from the perspective of access to justice and effectiveness of law, the European debate and the deep layers of the European reaction and resistance, revealing how the Copernican turn of class actions questions the fundamentals of the European thinking about market and public interest. Using a transsystemic presentation of the European national models, it analyzes the way collective actions were accommodated with the European regulatory environment, the novel and peculiar regulatory questions they had to address and how and why they work differently on this side of the Atlantic.
تنسيق الكتاب
مجاني
تعليقات
لقطة التصنيف
اختر صف بالأسفل لتصفية التعليقات.
0
0
0
0
0
0
بصورة إجمالية
متوسط تقييم المستخدمين
مراجعة هذا الكتاب
شارك أفكارك مع القراء
مزيد من المعلومات
description_of_book
This open access book offers an analytical presentation of how Europe has created its own version of collective actions. In the last three decades, Europe has seen a remarkable proliferation of collec
معلومات إضافية:
البائع
الناشر
تاريخ الإصدار
01 يناير 2019
ردمك -الرقم الدولي المعياري للكتب-
978-3-030-24222-0
عن المؤلفين:
University of Szeged, Department of Private International Law Hungarian Academy of Sciences Federal Markets “Momentum” Research Group Szeged, Hungary. Csongor István Nagy is professor of law and head of the Department of Private International Law at the University of Szeged and recurrent visiting professor at the Central European University (Budapest/New York), the Sapientia University of Transylvania (Romania) and the Riga Graduate School of Law (Latvia). He is admitted to the Budapest Bar and arbitrator at the Court of Arbitration attached to the Hungarian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Budapest. Csongor graduated at the Eötvös Loránd University of Sciences (ELTE, dr. jur.) in Budapest, in 2003, where he also earned a Ph.D. in 2009, and received master (LL.M., 2004) and S.J.D. degrees (2010) from the Central European University (CEU) in Budapest/New York. He pursued graduate studies in Rotterdam (the Netherlands), Heidelberg (Germany) and Ithaca, New York (Cornell University) and had visiting appointments in the Hague (Asser Institute), Munich (twice, Max Planck Institute), Brno (Masarykova University), CEU Business School (Budapest), Hamburg (Max Planck Institute), Edinburgh (University of Edinburgh), London (British Institute of International and Comparative Law), Bloomington, Indiana (Indiana University) and Brisbane, Australia (TC Beirne School of Law, University of Queensland). He was senior fellow at the Center for International Governance Innovation in Canada and Eurojus legal counsel in the European Commission’s Representation in Hungary. He has more than 150 publications in English, French, German, Hungarian, Romanian and (in translation) in Croatian and Spanish. At China-EU School of Law he will teach European Private Law.
Csongor István Nagy
جدول المحتوى