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Private international law and the Internet / Dan Jerker B. Svantesson.
2007
D 731 SVA.P
Available at WIPO Library
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详细记录
Title
Private international law and the Internet / Dan Jerker B. Svantesson.
描述
xxi, 440 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
国际图书编号
9041125167
9789041125163
9789041125163
Alternate Call Number
D 731 SVA.P
摘要
In this approach to what is perhaps the most crucial current issue in private international law, Dan Svantesson examines how the Internet affects and is affected by the four fundamental questions: When should a lawsuit be entertained by the courts? Which state's law should be applied? When should a court that can entertain a lawsuit decline to do so? And will a judgement rendered in one country be recognized in another? He identifies eleven characteristics of Internet communications that are relevant to these questions, and then proceeds with an investigation of whether and to what extent these characteristics (or their closest analogues) have already been dealt with in legal issues arising from other forms of communication."--BOOK JACKET.
附注
Bew. van proefschrift University of New South Wales, 2004.
书目等附注
Includes index and bibliographical references (pages 403-413) and index.
格式化内容附注
1. Introduction; 2. Approaching the internet; 3. Approaching private international law; 4. Traditional common law: Australia, England and Hong Kong SAR; 5. The United States of America; 6. European civil law: Germany and Sweden; 7. The people's Republic of China; 8. International instruments; 9. A critique of current rules of private international law; 10. Geo-identification: technology to the rescue? 11. Proposed " defamation convention model"; 12. Proposed "contracts convention model"; 13. Concluding remarks.
丛编
Information Law.
Published
Alphen aan den Rijn : Kluwer Law International, c2007.
语言
eng
记录出处
Review
In this approach to what is perhaps the most crucial current issue in private international law, Dan Svantesson examines how the Internet affects and is affected by the four fundamental questions: When should a lawsuit be entertained by the courts? Which state's law should be applied? When should a court that can entertain a lawsuit decline to do so? And will a judgement rendered in one country be recognized in another? He identifies eleven characteristics of Internet communications that are relevant to these questions, and then proceeds with an investigation of whether and to what extent these characteristics (or their closest analogues) have already been dealt with in legal issues arising from other forms of communication."--BOOK JACKET.