Product details
- Categories: Procedures
- Publisher: Intersentia Uitgevers
- ISBN: 9781780688596
- Publication Date: 06/03/2020
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 292
- Language: English
Summary
The European lawmaker is currently overseeing what appears to be a
paradigm shift in the way that cross-border litigation is conducted
within the European Union. This matter was initially conceptualised from
the perspective of international judicial cooperation, based on the
notion of mutual trust and mutual recognition. Recent developments,
however, have introduced the option of harmonisation as a new regulatory
approach.
The first part of the book is focused on the possible
methodological approaches at hand. Special emphasis is placed on the
role of the Court of Justice of the European Union as a “promoter” of a
European Procedural Law (principle of effectiveness and principle of
equivalence). The second part assesses to what extend harmonisation is
already used: “vertically”, through the regulations on international
judicial cooperation, for example the European Account Preservation
Order; and “horizontally”, through the promotion of harmonised standards
promoted by the directives on intellectual property rights and
competition damages (access to information and evidence), or in the
directive on trade secrets and in the field of data protection
(protection of confidential information). With a view to the future, the
final part examines two more recent initiatives: ELI-UNIDROIT and the
proposal for a directive on common minimum standards of civil procedure
in the EU.
The Future of the European Law of Civil Procedure: Coordination or Harmonisation?
clearly outlines the motivations of the various national and
institutional players in the regulation of civil procedural law and
identifies potential obstacles likely to be encountered along the way
that will be useful for every lawyer in the field.