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Gestation pour autrui : la CEDH revoit sa copie

La grande chambre de la Cour européenne des droits de l’homme (CEDH) a fait droit à la demande de l’Italie dans le cadre de l’éloignement d’un enfant né par GPA, celle-ci étant contraire à l’ordre public. Ce faisant, elle infirme la position de la CEDH sous l’angle de l’article 8 de la Convention européenne des droits de l’homme en matière d’absence de tout lien biologique entre l’enfant et les requérants.

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Categories: Flux français

Établissement en France d’un avocat ivoirien et appréciation de la condition de réciprocité

L’accord franco-ivoirien du 24 avril 1961 sur l’accord de coopération en matière de justice permet aux ressortissants de l’un des deux pays d’assister et de représenter leur client ponctuellement devant les juridictions de l’autre pays. Il n’autorise pas l’inscription au barreau. La cour d’appel de Paris a donc infirmé la décision du conseil de l’Ordre des avocats de Seine-Saint-Denis qui a admis l’inscription au tableau d’un avocat de nationalité ivoirienne.

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Categories: Flux français

Now you sue me, now you don’t. Trump v Daily Mail.

GAVC - Thu, 02/09/2017 - 14:14

The president and Mrs Trump keep on exercising the courts. In Melania Trump v Webster Tarpley and Mail Media, Inc., the circuit court for Montgomery County, Maryland, accepted jurisdiction against the former, who is resident in Maryland, but rejected it against the latter, who is resident at New York. (It is registered there and also has its head office there). The second defendant is most likely the owner of the website dailymail.com and dailymail.co.uk. Whether that was really the case was left in the middle though for the Daily Mail group (whom Wikipedia today confirmed as no longer accepting as a source of facts), wanted the judge to rule on the merits of jurisdiction rather than on a possibly wrongly identified defendant.

Alleged libel concerns reports published by Mr Tarpley, a blogger, and the Daily Mail, relating to remarks, later retracted by both defendants, on alleged past racy activities of Mrs Trump. At issue was whether the courts at Maryland have personal jurisdiction over Mail Media. Mrs Trump’s legal team suggest publication of defamatory material in a publication with significant circulation in the forum state, suffices for jurisdiction. This, they argue, is compounded by targeted interactivity between the Daily Mail and readers in Maryland. Mail Media suggest there is no direct connection between Maryland and the Mail Article at issue and that even if the court were to accept such connection, jurisdiction should be refused on the basis of forum non conveniens.

The court accepted the first defence and did not therefore entertain the second. P.7: operating a website, even one that is popular and makes money from advertising, is not ‘purposeful availment’ under precedent rule: the publication has to intentionally enter the forum market: the MAil’s influence in the US is on a national (federal) basis.

Note to class: compare the court’s approach with that of European courts under the Brussels I Recast Regulation.

Mrs Trump has now refiled in New York, where both her and second defendant are resident.

Geert.

 

SSRN: Recent articles on Private International Law/Conflict of Laws

Conflictoflaws - Thu, 02/09/2017 - 07:00

I thought it might be worth to draw your attention to a couple of interesting papers that I came across on SSRN recently (without any claim of completeness):

On Brexit and Private International Law:

On EU Private International Law:

On non-EU Private International Law:

International Arbitration

Procès équitable et témoignages de « repentis »

Par un arrêt du 17 janvier 2017, la Cour européenne des droits de l’homme s’est prononcée sur le caractère équitable du procès de personnes condamnées principalement sur le fondement des témoignages de « repentis » issus du milieu criminel.

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Categories: Flux français

12/2017 : 8 février 2017 - Arrêt de la Cour de justice dans l'affaire C2015/0562

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Wed, 02/08/2017 - 09:54
Une publicité comparative des prix entre des magasins de format et de taille différents n’est pas licite dans certaines circonstances

Categories: Flux européens

Brexit and Family Law Conference in Cambridge on 27 March 2017

Conflictoflaws - Wed, 02/08/2017 - 07:00

The UK’s withdrawal from the EU will precipitate important change in international family law. EU law has increasingly come to define key aspects of both jurisdiction and recognition & enforcement of judgments on divorce, maintenance, and disputes over children, including international child abduction, and provided new frameworks for cross-national cooperation.

Child & Family Law Quarterly and Cambridge Family Law will, therefore, host a joint seminar on 27 March 2017. International experts and practitioners will discuss the impacts of ‘Brexit’ on family law, from a range of national and European perspectives, and reflect on the future of international family law practice in the UK.

Academic speakers include:

  • Nigel Lowe, University of Cardiff
  • Anatol Dutta, University of Regensburg, Germany
  • Paul Beaumont, University of Aberdeen
  • Helen Stalford, University of Liverpool
  • Janeen Carruthers, University of Glasgow
  • Ruth Lamont, University of Manchester
  • Elizabeth Crawford, University of Glasgow

Panel discussion participants include

  • Rebecca Bailey-Harris, 1 Hare Court
  • David Hodson, International Family Law Group
  • Rachael Kelsey, Sheehan Kelsey Oswald, Edinburgh
  • Gavin Smith, 1 Hare Court

Conference registration fees:

  • £ 150 for practitioners
  • £ 100 for academics/Civil Servants/NGO
  • £ 25 for students

For more details, registration, accommodation and dinner tickets: www.fambrexit.law.cam.ac.uk/

 

Book: Human Rights in Business

Conflictoflaws - Tue, 02/07/2017 - 12:46

Just published by Routledge, the book Human Rights in Business: Removal of Barriers to Access to Justice in the European Union presensts the final results of the project which received a 2013 Civil Justice Action Grant from the European Commission Directorate General for Justice. The book is edited by Juan José Álvarez Álvarez Rubio and Katerina Yiannibas and includes a long list of reknown contributors from academia, legal practice and civil society. The begining of the official description from the book reads:

The capacity to abuse, or in general affect the enjoyment of human, labour and environmental rights has risen with the increased social and economic power that multinational companies wield in the global economy. At the same time, it appears that it is difficult to regulate the activities of multinational companies in such a way that they conform to international human, labour and environmental rights standards. This has partially to do with the organization of companies into groups of separate legal persons, incorporated in different states, as well as with the complexity of the corporate supply chain. Absent a business and human rights treaty, a more coherent legal and policy approach is required.

It is available for free download as an eBook:

– To download from the book’s page on the Routledge website, choose “Other eBook Options” button for download options.
– To download the free ebook from Amazon, click here.
– To download the free ebook from iTunes, click here.

11/2017 : 7 février 2017 - Conclusions de l'avocat général dans l'affaire C-638/16

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Tue, 02/07/2017 - 10:02
X et X
DFON
Selon l’avocat général Mengozzi, les États membres doivent délivrer un visa humanitaire lorsqu’il existe des motifs sérieux et avérés de croire qu’un refus exposera des personnes en quête de protection internationale à la torture ou à des traitements inhumains ou dégradants

Categories: Flux européens

The Dieselgate: A Legal Perspective / Aspetti giuridici del Dieselgate

Aldricus - Tue, 02/07/2017 - 07:00

The Dieselgate: A Legal Perspective, edited by / a cura di Marco Frigessi di Rattalma, Springer, 2017, ISBN 9783319483221, pp. X+218, EUR  145,59.

This book explains, compares and assesses the legal implications of Dieselgate within a range of selected jurisdictions and at the EU, international and comparative law level.The book analyses the US EPA-VW $14.7 billion dollar settlement of 2016, one of the largest civil settlements in the history of environmental law. As it shows, the Dieselgate affair has raised a host of issues concerning corporate and social responsibility, tort liability, environmental liability, contractual defective products, warranty, and false environmental claims in a range of jurisdictions. Issues like repurchasing or retrofitting cars from consumers and making direct payments to consumers through car buy-backs and compensation are analysed. Further, the book relates how Dieselgate has also contributed to the discussion about the introduction of more effective collective measures of redress for consumers, such as class actions, in Germany, France, Italy and the UK.The book subsequently reviews the criminal offences Volkswagen is currently confronted with in Germany, France and Italy, i.e. fraud and manipulation of capital markets (by belatedly providing shareholders with essential information relevant for the share value), and, potentially, environmental crimes. It demonstrates how Dieselgate has sparked new debates in Germany, Italy, France and the UK about the need to introduce enterprise liability for organised crimes, lack of compliance and control structures, and intentional violations of the law.Lastly, the book discusses how EU law has sought to respond to Dieselgate and thus investigates the controversial EU Regulation No. 2016/646 introducing a “temporary conformity factor” of 2.1 (equivalent to a 110% increase on the current limit) to be applied for NOx in the new RDE testing cycle, and the works of the EU committee of inquiry into Emissions Measurements in the Automotive Sector (EMIS).

Belgium signs the 2000 Adults Convention

Conflictoflaws - Mon, 02/06/2017 - 20:52

Belgium has today signed the 2000 Hague Convention on the International Protection of Adults.

This Convention is currently in force in nine States: Austria, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Monaco, Scotland and Switzerland. It has been signed but not yet ratified by nine other States, now including Belgium.

For more information see the website of the Hague Conference on Private International Law.

Pages

Sites de l’Union Européenne

 

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