The Unfathomable Nature and Future of the European Private Law Project

China-EU Law Journal, vol. 2, Nos. 1-2, pp. 69-94 (Sept. 2013)

Posted: 23 Nov 2013

See all articles by Tibor Tajti (Thaythy)

Tibor Tajti (Thaythy)

Central European University-Private University, Vienna, Austria

Date Written: September 2, 2013

Abstract

The article focuses on the historically unparalleled yet already unfolding and – especially by non-Europeans – hardly fathomable multidimensional process referred to by the generic term of European Private Law Project. Two main groups of problems make its meaning blurred: its ambivalent and heterogeneous nature and the distortions caused by the lack of consensus on the future of private law in Europe. It extends not just to the harmonization efforts of the European Union, or to such soft-law, Civil Code-like instruments produced by scholars as the Draft Common Frame of Reference, but also to many other less visible and thus neglected ways of diffusion and rapprochement of law. An important segment of the Project is also the ongoing discourse on the need and viability of a common European Civil Code.

Keywords: harmonization of private law, European research projects, DCFR, secured transactions law reforms, the limits of conflicts of law, Common European Sales Law

Suggested Citation

Tajti (Thaythy), Tibor, The Unfathomable Nature and Future of the European Private Law Project (September 2, 2013). China-EU Law Journal, vol. 2, Nos. 1-2, pp. 69-94 (Sept. 2013), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2319314

Tibor Tajti (Thaythy) (Contact Author)

Central European University-Private University, Vienna, Austria ( email )

Quellenstrasse 51
Vienna, Hungary 1100
Hungary
302440707 (Phone)
2330 (Fax)

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