European Private International Law 2200-BS043N
The assumption of the module is to provide students with knowledge about the basics of international legal transactions in civil matters within the European Union. It extends the knowledge of future lawyers about private international law (i.e. international contract law, non-contractual obligations, international bankruptcy, international family and succession law).
The graduate of the block will deeply understand the processes governing international civil law transactions in the European Union. It will be able to put into practice the mechanisms of international cooperation in civil matters, thanks to which it will become more competitive on the labor market (valuable acquisition for lawyers 'legal advisers' offices, notary offices and for civil, family and economic departments of common courts). Graduates with scientific predispositions will be able to participate in international scientific networks in the future and create valuable research programs on a pan-European scale.
Mode
Classroom
Requirements
Prerequisites
Civil Law I
Civil Law II part A
Civil Law II part B
Commercial Law
The European Union Law
Prerequisites (description)
Course coordinators
Learning outcomes
An average graduate of the unit will deeply understand the processes governing international civil law transactions in the European Union.
He understands the structure of EU international private law and its relation to national law.
He knows the system of sources of EU international private law and the content of the basic principles of this law, as well as the rules governing the interpretation and application of EU PPM.
He is prepared to learn how to apply these legal rules.
Assessment criteria
Attending lectures; reading recommended texts and case-law checked in the forms provided by lecturers.
Practical placement
Not foreseen.
Bibliography
For the general questions of the module
- P. Stone, Private International Law in the European Union, 4th ed., Cheltenham: Elgar European Law 2018
- U. Magnus, P. Mankowski (eds.), European Commentaries on Private International Law, Köln: Verlag Otto Schmidt 2018 (Rome I/II, Regulation No. 650/2012)
Notes
Term 2024L:
None |
Additional information
Additional information (registration calendar, class conductors, localization and schedules of classes), might be available in the USOSweb system: