While focusing on international private law and international arbitration, the essays also address the questions of constitutional law and legal philosophy. State-of-the-art contributions, covering a wide scope from the practical analysis of American arbitration policy and the position of the USA vis-à-vis international law, through the latest developments in German legal practice, to theoretical issues of jurisdiction. Especially rich is the volume in exploring the legal dimension of the European integration process.
- Cover
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Greeting from the Rector
- Acknowledgments
- Tibor Várady—Introduction
- Expanded Judicial Review of Awards After Hall Street and in Comparative Perspective
- Tibor Várady’s Advocacy Before the International Court of Justice
- From “Real Seat” to “Legal Seat”: Germany’s Private International Company Law Revolution
- The Impact of Community Law on the Determination
of the Personal Law of Companies
- Public Law, Ordre Public and Arbitration: A Procedural Scenario and a Suggestion
- Forging American Arbitration Policy: Judicial Interpretation
of the Federal Arbitration Act
- The Decline of Free Thinking
- Questions of Arbitration and the Case Law of the European Court of Justice
- Recognition of a Recognition Judgment Within the European Union: “Double Exequatur” and the Public Policy Barrier
- European Union Legislation and Private International Law: A View from Hungary
- Constitutional Democracy:
Outline of a Defense
- The European Dream and its
Evolution in the Architecture of the Treaties of Integration
- “Non-Signatories” and the Long Arm of Arbitral Jurisdiction
- The Pendulum Swings Back: The Cooperative Approach of German Courts
to International Service of Process
- Internationale Schiedsgerichtsbarkeit
über Kulturgut-Streitigkeiten
- About the Rome II Regulation: The European
Unification of the Conflict Rules to Torts
- The United States and the Jurisprudence of International Tribunals
- Bibliography of Tibor Várady
- List of Authors