Conventions de Bruxelles et de Lugano : édition multilingue = Brussels and Lugano Conventions : multilingual edition.

Door: Cour de Justice des Communautés Européennes = Court of Justice of the European Communities.


  • ISBN: 9789282903384
  • Uitgever: Luxembourg : Office des Publications Officielles des Communautés Européennes, c1997. Paperback. xxiv,869 pp. (Cat.nr.: DX-06-97-456-2A-C). 30 cm. Ticket on spine. Library stamps. Bit dog-eared. Conditie: redelijk
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  • Details: Conditie: redelijk. RECHT
  • Extra informatie: - The Brussels Regime is a set of rules regulating which courts have jurisdiction in legal disputes of a civil or commercial nature between individuals resident in different member states of the European Union (EU) and the European Free Trade Association (EFTA). It has detailed rules assigning jurisdiction for the dispute to be heard and governs the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgements. Recognition and enforcement of judgements in civil and commercial cases was originally accomplished within the European Communities by the 1968 Brussels convention: a treaty signed by the then six members of the Communities.[1] This treaty was amended on several occasions and has now been almost completely superseded by a regulation adopted in 2001, the Brussels I regulation. Today the convention only applies between the 15 pre-2004 members of the European Union and certain territories of EU member states which are outside the Union: these being Aruba, the French overseas territories and Mayotte.[2] It is intended that the Brussels Convention will be replaced by the new Lugano Convention, the latter being open to ratification by EU member states acting on behalf of non-European territories which belong to that member state. In 1988, the then 12 member states of the European Communities signed a treaty, the Lugano Convention with the then six members of the European Free Trade Association: Austria, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland.[3][4] The Lugano Convention served to extend the recognition regime to EFTA member state who are not eligible to sign the Brussels Convention. Other than the original signatories three of which left EFTA to join the EU in 1995 only Poland has subsequently acceded to the Lugano Convention. Liechtenstein, the only state to accede to the EFTA after 1988 has neither signed the 1988 Convention nor it successor the 2007 Lugano Convention.
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