Juxtaposing Legal Systems and the Principles of European Family Law on Parental Responsibilities (European Family Law, 27, Band 27) - Softcover

 
9789050959797: Juxtaposing Legal Systems and the Principles of European Family Law on Parental Responsibilities (European Family Law, 27, Band 27)

Inhaltsangabe

The Commission on European Family Law (CEFL) published its Principles of European Family Law Regarding Parental Responsibilities in 2007 as a contribution towards the establishment of a European family law. Only by empirical testing of the Principles in a number of legal systems can one demonstrate whether they are acceptable and/or are regarded as an improvement on existing national laws. This edited volume tests the Principles in a range of legal systems - some untested (Malta, Estonia, Romania, Scotland, and Turkey) and some already considered by the CEFL (Denmark and England) - and, in so doing, assesses these legal systems in view of the Principles, and the Principles in view of these legal systems. The final part of the book is a comparative assessment of the findings, considering the Principles as harmonious ideals, and it analyzes the shortfalls in these ideals.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Esin Orucu is Professor Emerita of Comparative Law and Honorary Senior Research Fellow, University of Glasgow; and Professor Emerita of Comparative Law, Erasmus University Rotterdam. She was born in 1940 in Istanbul. She graduated from Istanbul University, Law Faculty. She completed her PhD in Istanbul University. She is a member of the Istanbul Bar. She has been working and living in Britain since 1976. She also was part time Professor in the Netherlands (EUR) until 2005. She is retired but still teaches in Glasgow (Mixed legal systems). 

Von der hinteren Coverseite

The Commission on European Family Law published its “Principles of European Family Law Regarding Parental Responsibilities” in 2007 as a contribution towards the establishment of a European Family Law. Only by empirical testing of the Principles in a number of legal systems can one demonstrate whether they are acceptable and/or are regarded as an improvement on existing national laws. This edited volume seeks to test the Principles in a range of legal systems, some untested: Malta, Estonia, Romania, Scotland and Turkey; some already considered by the CEFL: Denmark and England; and in so doing to assess these legal systems in view of the Principles, and the Principles in view of these legal systems. The final part of the volume is a comparative assessment of the findings, considering the Principles as harmonious ideals, and analysing the shortfalls in these ideals.

About the book
‘… a considerable achievement in terms of the brining together of a range of national systems on child law and […] and to promote and further develop the importance of placing the child at the centre of the legal framework of regulation. […] apart from its informative value, this book also provides the reader with food for further thought and contributes significantly to the ever-current debate of how far the harmonisation of European family law can go.’
Cl. Spirou in 2010 Revue Hellénique de droit international 1025

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