Introduction to Polish Private International Law 2200-FOR39
During the course students are acquainted mainly with Polish Private International Law in the stricter sense (law on the conflict of laws). Key issues discussed: general part of the PIL (aim and foundations, characterization of legal notions, structure of rules of PIL, various types of connecting factors, nationality of a natural person, renvoi, non-unified legal systems, public policy, application of a foreign law by Polish courts), specific issues (law applicable to: status of natural persons, moral persons, contractual and extra-contractual obligations, absolute rights in tangible and intangible objects, family matters, successions). International civil procedure — esp. jurisdiction of courts, recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments — generally is not a part of the course.
Type of course
Mode
Blended learning
Prerequisites (description)
Course coordinators
Learning outcomes
Students know and understand the basic notions of Private International Law; they are ready to learn how to apply its rules in practice.
Assessment criteria
Students are examined at the end of the course in the test form (single choice test) on the e-learning platform. Credits according to the standard grading scale of the University of Warsaw (foreign students later have them transformed into the international scale of the Erasmus programme). Current evaluation is not foreseen.
Practical placement
They are not foreseen.
Bibliography
- Polish Act of 4 Feb., 2011 on Private International Law (unofficial English translation prepared by the course instructors)
- A. Wysocka-Bar, E. Kamarad, Private International Law in Poland, Alphen aan den Rijn 2020
- M. Pilich, Private international law: Collected Lectures, available on the Kampus e-learning platform
- D. Lasok, The Polish System of Private International Law, Amer. J. Comp. Law. 1966-67, 330-351
- A. Mączyński, Polish Private International Law, Yb. Priv. Int'l Law 2004, 203-220
- J. Rajski, The New Polish Private International Law, Int'l & Comp. L. Quart. 1966, s. 457-469
- English abstracts of cases before the Supreme Court (chosen and translated by the teachers)
Additional information
Additional information (registration calendar, class conductors, localization and schedules of classes), might be available in the USOSweb system: