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The United Nations Convention For The International Sale Of Goods (Cisg) And Related Issues Of Conflict Of Laws, Francesco Pifferi Jan 1998

The United Nations Convention For The International Sale Of Goods (Cisg) And Related Issues Of Conflict Of Laws, Francesco Pifferi

LLM Theses and Essays

This paper addresses a need for legal predictability in international sale of goods. The author explores the twin purposes of the CISG to provide uniform substantive rules for international sale contracts and to solve conflict of laws problems through a uniform choice of law principle. The paper explores the regime of conflict of law rules in the CISG in comparison with the Hague Convention on the Law Applicable to the Contracts for the International Sale of Goods, EC Rome Convention on the Law Applicable to Contractual Obligations, and the Inter-American Convention on the Law Applicable to International Contracts. The scope …


Choice Of Law Issues In International Sale Of Goods Contracts, Bayu Seto Hardjowahono Jan 1989

Choice Of Law Issues In International Sale Of Goods Contracts, Bayu Seto Hardjowahono

LLM Theses and Essays

The growing quality and quantity of today’s international sales of goods activities is unquestionably influential and vital to the shaping of current national economies throughout the world.

The present work will explore the issue of choice of law questions in international sale of goods contracts by examining the approaches of the Vienna 1980 Convention, the Hague 1955 Convention and the 1985 Draft Convention. The present work concludes by showing that it is advisable for a forum to use the 2nd Restatement approach in such a situation because of the degree of flexibility it offers in international trade practices.


International Concurrent Jurisdiction: Dealing With The Possibility Of Parallel Proceedings In The Courts Of More Than One Country, Bernd U. Graf Jan 1988

International Concurrent Jurisdiction: Dealing With The Possibility Of Parallel Proceedings In The Courts Of More Than One Country, Bernd U. Graf

LLM Theses and Essays

This thesis will examine how legal systems deal with the phenomenon of multiple assumptions of jurisdiction over the same dispute. We will first look at public international law rules on jurisdiction, regulating (or not regulating) conflicting states' interests, which will give only modest guidance. In view of those rules, the subsequent chapters will deal with various national laws relating to the possibility of parallel proceedings in the courts of more than one country, and thus the possibility of the emergence of conflicting orders or judgments.