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Hess | Ortolani

Impediments of National Procedural Law to the Free Movement of Judgments

Luxembourg Report on European Procedural Law
Volume I
Nomos,  2019, 494 Pages

ISBN 978-3-8487-5864-7

180,00 € incl. VAT
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englischThis volume presents a comparative examination and empirical evaluation of national procedural rules and practices, and further assesses the key procedural problems that impact mutual trust and the free movement of judgments in light of national and European Court of Justice case law. It provides an exhaustive overview of the similarities and differences of civil procedure in all EU Member States, and their impact on the recognition and enforcement of judgments.

The volume offers the most comprehensive, empirically-driven comparative investigation of national civil procedure thus far undertaken in Europe. Using an extensive dataset comprising hundreds of interviews and responses to a multi-language online survey, it examines the rules of civil procedure in all EU Member States, and identifies their impact on mutual trust and the free movement of judgments.

This volume will be of interest for all practitioners, academics and policymakers with a focus on judicial cooperation and civil justice, and will facilitate a better understanding of the impact of national procedural laws on cross-border dispute resolution in Europe.

»Through its high quality and particular emphasis on how black-letter procedural rules operate in practice, the Luxembourg report stands out from the profusion of research on all sorts of facets of procedural law. The out from the profusion of research on all sorts of facets of procedural law.«
Prof. Dr. Hans-Wolfgang Micklitz, RabelsZ 4/2022