Additional articles from SSRN have been
noted by our friend in the Irish Society of
Comparative Law:
Ralf Michaels, ‘Code vs.
Code: Nationalist and Internationalist Images of the Code Civil in the French
Resistance to a European Codification’ (2012) 8 European Review of
Contract Law (forthcoming):
French academics reacted to
announcements about a possible future European civil code ten years ago in the
way in which Americans reacted to the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor 1940:
first with shock, then with rearmament, finally with attempted counterattacks.
Military metaphors abound. Yet the defense of the French Code Civil against a
European civil code is tricky: they must defend one Code against another. The
images drawn of codes are therefor of particular interest for our understanding
both of civil codes and of legal nationalism. Often, two mutually exclusive
images are presented at the same time. In cultural terms, the code civil is both
traditional and revolutionary, both linguistically determined and independent
of its language, both an expression of values and merely formal and neutral.
Politically, the code civil is legitimated both in democracy and technocracy,
it expresses both self-determination and imperialism, it is about both
pluralism and universalism. Necessarily, in such juxtapositions, the same
characteristics must be assigned to a European Code, making the arguments
ultimately self-refuting. Nonetheless, the point is not to dismiss these
defenses. Rather, they should be understood as expressions of faith — and the
discussion over a European Code resembles, in part, a religious war.
Leon Trakman, ‘A Plural
Account of the Transnational Law Merchant’ (2012) 2 Transnational Legal
Theory 309:
The Law Merchant is depicted today
as a transnational system based on merchant practice operating outside the
fabric of national law. It is conceived as cosmopolitan in nature, universal in
application, expertly delivered, and independent of other regulatory systems.
This article critiques these
qualities attributed to the historical as well as present-day Law Merchant. It
disputes that it has evolved ‘spontaneously’ out of merchant practice; that it
is uniform in nature; and that it transcends national law. It argues instead
that the Law Merchant is often fragmentary in nature and subject to disparate
national and transnational influences. It challenges, in particular, unitary
conceptions of ‘autonomy’ ascribed to the Law Merchant, presenting a
pluralistic conception of Law Merchant ‘autonomy’ instead. It illustrates these
arguments in relation to the so-called Cyberspace Law Merchant and to
transnational commercial arbitration.
No comments:
Post a Comment