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Foreign Law in English Courts Richard Fentiman (Lecturer in Law, Lecturer in Law, University of Cambridge)

Foreign Law in English Courts By Richard Fentiman (Lecturer in Law, Lecturer in Law, University of Cambridge)

Summary

How foreign law is established, and whether it must be established at all, are central issues in private international law. This book examines the topic from the perspective of English law and offers a reappraisal of the subject. Fentiman argues that the law is both more complex, and more defensible, than had previously been supposed.

Foreign Law in English Courts Summary

Foreign Law in English Courts: Pleading, Proof and Choice of Law by Richard Fentiman (Lecturer in Law, Lecturer in Law, University of Cambridge)

How foreign law is established, and whether it must be relied upon at all, are central issues in private international law, with important implications in principle and in practice. Whether litigants are free to ignore the foreign elements in a dispute goes to the heart of the conflicts process, and without effective means to establish the content of foreign law the object of that process is undermined. The cost and unpredictability of establishing foreign law also have an important impact on litigation, affecting the parties' choice of forum, and how cases are argued and decided. This book, the first detailed examination of the topic in English law, is an account of the pleading and proof of foreign law from an English perspective, which also places the law in a comparative context, and considers options for reform. It provides a practical guide to the subject, but also presents the conflicts process in a way which is both novel and illuminating. Recognized as the leading account of the subject, this book is the first point of reference for both scholars and practitioners. It is frequently cited with approval in the courts, in England and elsewhere, notably in leading cases such as MCC v Bishopsgate Investments (1998, Court of Appeal), Shaker v Al Bedrawi (Court of Appeal, 2002), and Neilson v Overseas Projects Corporation (High Court of Australia, 2005).

Foreign Law in English Courts Reviews

a most important contribution to a gradual approximation of common law and civil law approaches to the subject * Professor Erik Jayme, Professor of Law, University of Heidelberg and President of the Institut de Droit International *
Oxford University Press are to be warmly congratulated on promoting a series of specialist monographs in Private International Law ... nearly 350 pages of balanced and detailed text ... As one would expect from Oxford University Press the work is handsomely produced with detailed footnotes containing full references to common law and civil law jurisdictions ... The volume will benefit any lawyer with a case involving foreign law ... this book can be read with profit and pleasure by all ... a timely, readable and absorbing book which is likely to become the specialist text on this particular topic ... this volume will be cited regularly in the courts and will find a place in all university law libraries. Mr Fentiman has made a valuable contribution to the literature of private international law with this specialist monograph. * Legal Update, 1999 ( reviewer not named) *
This book is a much-needed addition to the slowly developing stock of modern, scholarly writings about the nature and theory of conflict laws from the English standpoint ... the work will be read with interest and enlightenment by academics and practitioners alike ... thanks to Fentiman, those curious to discover these matters can set about doing so, and at the same time they will be pleasantly surprised to discover some promising indications that the law is at last destined to enter upon a phase of reformulation in consequence of recent developments ... The ten chapters of Fentiman's book together provide a challenging, and tautly argued, account of the law that is properly critical of its illogical and absurd aspects ... a fascinating period of evolution is in prospect ... the current text provides ample inspiration, and intellectual sustenance, for those who aspire to play an active part in that process. * Ian Fletcher, The Law Quarterly Review, Vol 115, July 1999 *
"A book of remarkable wealth", Horatia Muir Watt, Revue Critique - January-March 1999
Any writer touching on English law owes a very great debt to Richard Fentiman. * James McComish, Melbourne University Law Review *
This is a monograph of rare quality which will have a considerable impact on our understanding of its subject, and so both on teaching and practice. * David McLean, British Yearbook of International Law *

About Richard Fentiman (Lecturer in Law, Lecturer in Law, University of Cambridge)

Richard Fentiman is Reader in Private International Law at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Queens' College, Cambridge. He previously practised full-time as a solicitor. He is responsible for the postgraduate course on International Commercial Litigation at Cambridge, and lectures regularly at universities and to practitioners in many countries. He was a co-author of the Financial Markets Law Committee's recent reports on the commercial impact of the Rome I and Brussels I Regulations, and gave evidence to the House of Lords EU Law Committee on changes to the European jurisdiction and judgments regime. He is well known for his expertise and writing on the subject of private international law, and in particular for his book Foreign Law in English Courts (OUP, 1998).

Table of Contents

I INTRODUCTION ; II LEGAL RISK AND MULTISTATE TRANSACTIONS ; III THE LAWS GOVERNING MULTISTATE LITIGATION ; IV COMMENCING PROCEEDINGS ; V PREVENTING PROCEEDINGS ; VI RECOVERY AND ENFORCEMENT

Additional information

NPB9780198258780
9780198258780
019825878X
Foreign Law in English Courts: Pleading, Proof and Choice of Law by Richard Fentiman (Lecturer in Law, Lecturer in Law, University of Cambridge)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
1998-06-25
368
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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