Suchergebnisse
Filter
30 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
SSRN
Consumer Law for a Post-Consumer Society
In: (2023) 12 Journal of European Consumer and Market Law (EuCML), 1-3
SSRN
Freedom of Speech, Consumer Protection and the Duty to Contract
In: in Ch. Mak, B. Kas (eds.), Civil Courts and the European Polity. The Constitutional Role of Private Law Adjudication in Europe, Oxford: Hart Publishing 2023, 123–138
SSRN
Deutsch-polnische Rechtsgemeinschaft. Gemeinsam in Europa, gemeinsam für Europa. Hrsg. von Udo Fink, Peter-Christian Müller- Graff, Krzystzof Oplustil, Przemyslaw Roguski. Baden-Baden 2021
In: Rabels Zeitschrift für ausländisches und internationales Privatrecht: The Rabel journal of comparative and international private law, Band 87, Heft 1, S. 213
ISSN: 1868-7059
Effectiveness and EU Consumer Law: the Blurriness in Judicial Dialogue
In: F. Casarosa, M. Moraru (eds.), The Practice of Judicial Interaction in the Field of Fundamental Rights – The Added Value of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU (Cheltenham–Northampton: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2021) 235–256
SSRN
European Consumer Law after the New Deal: A Tryptich
In: Yearbook of European law, Band 39, S. 387-422
ISSN: 2045-0044
Abstract
In 2018/2019, EU private law experienced one of the most vigorous and meaningful changes in its evolution so far. The prominence of this alteration does not rest solely on the number of new rules, but—more importantly—on the substantially new perspective on economic and social tasks of European private law. The reform encompassed three core areas: consumer protection, sustainability and digital commerce. The paper seeks to better understand the transformative task of private law in the social and economic realm. The protection of the environment, on the one hand, and the informational autonomy and privacy, on the other, provide a new type of challenge for the existing agenda of private law, reaching beyond economic efficiency as its ultimate goal. Finally, the emergence of digitalization and sustainability as the new domains of private law reinvigorates the question of to what extent the European private law should directly engage itself in pursuing the social and economic agenda. The 2018/2019 legislation opened a new chapter in this discussion, facing private law with a new genre of tasks, which traditionally belonged to the domain of public ordering. The paper seeks to unpack the essence of this change by focusing on three intertwined issues: vulnerability, autonomy, and regulation. Mingled together they seem to form the backbone of the reform, which seems to provide an in-depth subversion of the existing conceptual structures of EU consumer law.
Does European Contract Law Need a New Concept of Vulnerability?
In: Journal of European Consumer and Market Law (EuCML) 4/2021, https://tinyurl.com/ybayuj9m
SSRN
Lost in transition? Freedom of Contract in Poland and the Central European Experience
In: European University Institute Working Paper, Max Weber Programme, MWP 2020/08
SSRN
Working paper
Default Rules Beyond a State: Special-Purpose Lawmakers in the Platform Economy
In: S. Grundmann, M. Grochowski (eds.), 'European Contract Law and the Creation of Norms' (Antwerp: Intersentia, 2021), 227-252
SSRN
Working paper
The Majoritarian Concept of Default Rules: Towards a Shift in Paradigms?
In: 15 Studies in Private Law [Studia Prawa Prywatnego], No. 1, 2020
SSRN
Inheritance of the Social Media Accounts in Poland
In: European Review of Private Law, Band 27, Heft 5, S. 1195-1206
ISSN: 0928-9801
Inheritance of the Social Media Accounts in Poland
In: Published in: 27 European Review of Private Law, No. 5, pp. 1195-1206, 2019
SSRN
Martin Schmidt-Kessel, Der Entwurf für ein Gemeinsames Europäisches Kaufrecht Kommentar
In: European Review of Private Law, Band 23, Heft 6, S. 1125-1130
ISSN: 0928-9801
The practical potential of the DCFR Judgment of the Swedish Supreme Court (Högsta domstolen) of 3 November 2009, Case T 3–08
In: European review of contract law: ERCL, Band 9, Heft 1
ISSN: 1614-9939
The Practical Potential of the DCFR Judgment of the Swedish Supreme Court (Högsta Domstolen) of 3 November 2009 Case T 3–08
In: Published in: 9 European Review of Contract Law (2013), pp 96-104
SSRN