Hace un año dediqué una entrada a
reseñar el Congreso celebrado en el Instituto Max-Planck de Derecho privado
internacional y extranjero de Hamburgo en junio de 2013, y centrado en analizar desde
una perspectiva comparada los últimos desarrollos en materia de DIPr en la
R.P.China, Taiwan y la Unión Europea. Acaba de aparecer publicado por la
editorial Mohr Siebeck, bajo el título Private International Law in Mainland China, Taiwan and Europe, y editado por Jürgen
Basedow y Knut B. Pißler, el volumen que recopila las diversas contribuciones de
los ponentes que participamos en dicho Congreso.
Private International Law in Mainland China, Taiwan and Europe
Ed. by Jürgen Basedow and Knut B.
Pißler
2014. XIII, 470 pages. MatIPR 52
ISBN 978-3-16-153356-3
cloth € 84.00
Survey of contents:
Part 1: Jurisdiction, Choice of Law, and the Recognition of Foreign
Judgments in Recent Legislation
Jin Huang: New Perspectives on Private International Law in the
People’s Republic of China - Rong-Chwan
Chen: Jurisdiction, Choice of Law and the Recognition of Foreign Judgments
in Taiwan - Stefania Bariatti:
Jurisdiction, Choice of Law and the Recognition of Foreign Judgments in Recent
EU Legislation
Part 2: Selected Problems of General Provisions
Weizuo Chen: Selected Problems of General Provisions in Private
International Law: The PRC Perspective - Rong-Chwan
Chen: General Provisions in the Taiwanese Private International Law
Enactment 2010 - Jürgen Basedow: The
Application of Foreign Law – Comparative Remarks on the Practical Side of
Private International Law
Part 3: Property Law
Huanfang Du: The Choice of Law for Property Rights in Mainland
China: Progress and Imperfection - Yao-Ming
Hsu: Property Law in Taiwan- Louis
d’Avout: Property Law in Europe
Part 4: Contractual Obligations
Qisheng He: Recent Developments of New Chinese Private
International Law With Regard to Contracts - David J. W. Wang: The Revision of Taiwan’s Choice-of-law Rules in
Contracts - Pedro A. De Miguel Asensio:
The Law Applicable to Contractual Obligations. The Rome I Regulation in
Comparative Perspective
Part 5: Non-Contractual Obligations
Guoyong Zou: The Latest Developments in China’s Conflicts Law for
Non-contractual Obligations - En-Wei Lin:
New Private International Law Legislation in Taiwan: Negotiorum Gestio, Unjust
Enrichment and Tort - Peter Arnt Nielsen:
Non-Contractual Obligations in the European Union: The Rome II Regulation
Part 6: Personal Status (Family Law/Succession Law)
Yujun Guo: Personal Status in Chinese Private International Law
Reform - Hua-Kai Tsai: Recent
Developments in Taiwan’s Private International Law on Family Matters - Katharina Boele-Woelki: International
Private Law in China and Europe: A Comparison of Conflict-of-law Rules
Regarding Family and Succession Law
Part 7: Company Law
Tao Du: The New Chinese Conflict-of-law Rules for Legal Persons: Is
the Middle Way Feasible? - Wang-Ruu Tseng:
Private International Law in Taiwan – Company Law - Marc-Philippe Weller: Companies in Private International Law – A
European and German Perspective
Part 8: International Arbitration
Song Lu: China – A Developing Country in the Field of International
Arbitration - Carlos Esplugues Mota:
International Commercial Arbitration in the EU and the PRC: A Tale of Two
Continents or 28 + 3 Legal Systems